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Today — 20 February 2026Yahoo! Sports - News, Scores, Standings, Rumors, Fantasy Games

Afghanistan crush Canada by 82 runs to bow out on a high

CHENNAI: Ibrahim Zadran struck a fluent unbeaten 95 while Mohammed Nabi took four wickets for just seven runs as Afghanistan signed off from the T20 World Cup with a comprehensive 82-run victory over Canada, here Thursday.

Canada signed off without a win from the tournament while Afghanistan had their second win. The Rashid-Khan led side was clearly the better team and had it won the cliffhanger against South Africa, the side would have avoided an early elimination.

In a battle of pride between two already-eliminated sides, Afghanistan rode on a blazing unbeaten knock from Zadran to post a formidable 200 for four and then restricted Canada to 118 for 8 to seal an emphatic win.

With both teams aiming to return home on a high, Afghanistan produced a commanding batting effort after being sent in to bat.

Canada's chase never really gathered momentum after captain Dilpreet Bajwa's brief 13 off seven ended in the third over.

They slipped to 33 for three inside six overs, with Mohammad Nabi striking crucial blows, including the wickets of Yuvraj Samra (17) and Nicholas Kirton (10).

Off-spinner Mujeeb Ur Rahman removed Bajwa, while Azmatullah Omarzai accounted for Navneet Dhaliwal as Afghanistan tightened the screws early.

Harsh Thaker (30) and Saad Bin Zafar (28) attempted a repair job with a 53-run stand for the sixth wicket, but Afghanistan's spin duo ensured there was no comeback.

Nabi returned remarkable figures of 4 for 7 in four overs, while skipper Rashid Khan chipped in with two wickets.

With wickets falling at regular intervals and the required run rate soaring, Canada folded meekly to hand Afghanistan a comprehensive win to close their campaign.

Earlier, Zadran rode on a spilled catch to punish the Canada bowlers with seven fours and five sixes, leading Afghanistan to a big total.

Rahmanullah Gurbaz began cautiously but survived an early scare when he was dropped by wicketkeeper Shreyas Movva off pacer Dilon Heyliger in the second over.

It took Gurbaz (30 off 20) a few deliveries to measure the surface before he unfurled a flurry of crisp boundaries. However, just when he looked set, Jaskaran Singh had him caught at deep point in the sixth over.

Jaskaran struck again three balls later, trapping the dangerous Gulbadin Naib lbw for one, briefly pegging Afghanistan back at 49 for two.

Thereafter, Zadran took charge.

The right-hander ensured the run-rate never dipped, striking freely against both pace and spin. Alongside Sediqullah Atal (44 off 32), he stitched a fluent 95-run stand for the third wicket, with the duo particularly severe on the spinners.

Zadran was fortunate on 54 when Kaleem Sana spilled a chance off left-arm spinner Ansh Patel. Canada's fielding lapses hurt them dearly, and Afghanistan capitalised with sharp running between the wickets.

Jaskaran eventually broke the stand, inducing Atal to hole out in the deep, but Zadran carried on unfazed. He struck seven fours and five sixes in his 56-ball knock, narrowly missing out on a deserved hundred.

Late cameos from Azmatullah Omarzai (13 off 7) and Darwish Rasooli (4 not out) helped Afghanistan finish strongly at exactly 10 runs per over.

For Canada, Jaskaran (3/52) was the lone bright spot with the ball, but their indifferent fielding and inability to contain Zadran meant they faced a stiff chase in a match that offered little beyond pride but plenty of competitive intent.

Cavs say they would love to have Max Strus back before the playoffs

MIAMI, FL - APRIL 26: Max Strus #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers handles the ball during the game against the Miami Heat during Round 1 Game 3 of the 2025 NBA Playoffs on April 26, 2025 at Kaseya Center in Miami, Florida. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE(Photo by Eric Espada/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers are still waiting for Max Strus to make this 2025-26 season debut. With just 27 games left on the schedule, the Cavs are simply hoping he’ll be back on the court before the playoffs begin in April.

“Listen, getting Max back at any time before the playoffs would be a huge bonus,” said Atkinson. “He missed a ton of time last year with the ankle, and for a guy with that much experience… Of course you’d [still] like to have a little runway where he gets his rhythm, but as long as we have him for the playoff run, I think that’s a win for us.”

Kenny Atkinson says the #Cavs would love to have Max Strus back before the playoffs start pic.twitter.com/Klm53ZplCA

— Tony Pesta (@Tony_Pesta) February 19, 2026

Strus suffered a Jones fracture in his foot in late August. His original timeline had him out for 3-4 months, but an update in January gave Strus another month before re-evaluation. We’re now in late February, and Strus is reportedly still not taking contact in practice. Though Atkinson insists that Strus is trending in the right direction and expects him to play before the regular season is over.

“Yes,” Atkinson replied when asked if he anticipated Strus playing this season. “Looking at his on-court work, it’s trending much more positive. But, still a ways to go.”

This is the second season in a row that Strus missed the beginning of the year with a foot injury. Last season, he was held out until December with an ankle injury. Once he returned, Strus had no trouble finding his groove and contributing to a successful regular season.

Whether or not Strus has enough time to ramp up before the playoffs begin remains to be seen. One thing’s for certain, he’s the type of plug-and-play athlete who can make this short runway work. Strus is a competitor through and through. As Atkinson says, getting him back at any point this season should provide the Cavs with a boost.

Hull KR's Litten 'had nightmares about Walsh'

Jez Litten (left), Oliver Gildart (centre) and Elliot Minchella (right) celebrate Gildart's try against Brisbane Broncos for Hull KR
Jez Litten (left) set up Elliot Minchella's (right) try for Hull KR against Brisbane Broncos with an incredible kick to the corner [SWPix]

Hull KR hooker Jez Litten said he had nightmares about Brisbane Broncos' full-back Reece Walsh in the lead-up to their historic World Club Challenge win over the NRL Premiers.

Litten sent captain Elliot Minchella in for the Robins' second try as they raced out of the blocks in the first half and eventually built what had seemed like a commanding 30-4 lead after the break.

Brisbane, flanked by the usually talismanic Walsh - who had an error-strewn performance at times - then scored 20 unanswered points to set up an incredibly tense finale at the MKM Stadium as KR held on.

"The boys turned up against a team like Brisbane and we knew we had a big job on our hands but we just scrambled together and got the win," Litten told BBC Sport.

"I've been off all week ill, I've been having nightmares about Reece Walsh running at me, and they all came true tonight.

"When you've got someone like him coming out the back, credit to the boys who were helping me out."

Reece Walsh (right) evades a tackle from Mikey Lewis (left)
The usually mercurial Reece Walsh (right) showed a mixture of errors and brilliance in Brisbane Broncos' defeat by Hull KR [SWPix]

Hull KR came into the match off the back of an uncharacteristic loss against newly promoted York Knights last week, but dominated in 2025 as they won the treble of Challenge Cup, League Leaders' Shield and Super League Grand Final.

Their victory against Brisbane meant they held out to become only the sixth English club to win a World Club Challenge since it became a regular fixture in 1987.

They now also hold all four titles, the first club to do so since Wigan in their quadruple-winning 2024 campaign and first to do it in two seasons since St Helens in 2006-07.

"I'm proud of everyone involved in our club. I'm happy for our owner Neil Hudgell and the people of Hull," boss Willie Peters told BBC Sport.

"We had a responsibility for more than our local community, it was for Super League and the British game and we did them proud."

Those sentiments were echoed by Litten, who credited the supporters not just of Hull KR but of Super League as a whole on a night to remember for the sport in the northern hemisphere.

"I think they just took over tonight, they were unreal, but all the other Super League supporters who have come out and supported us, we wanted to do the English game proud and we spoke about that," Litten added.

"We obviously get a lot of stick off the Aussies but it's good to get one over them tonight"

Bills have several Keon Coleman questions to answer this offseason

Bills have several Keon Coleman questions to answer this offseason originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The Buffalo Bills' offseason, for most, will be dominated by whether or not general manager Brandon Beane can get Josh Allen that No. 1 weapon many have wanted him to get for years.

While that is a pressing issue, no doubt, what is also at the forefront of mind is what the franchise does with young receiver Keon Coleman.

It has been a rocky first two seasons for Keon, and then we have that horror press conference where his owner was less than complimentary toward him. Many wonder if Coleman's future is still with Buffalo.

For ESPN's Alaina Getzenberg, there are a host of things the Bills have to figure out with Coleman, and fast.

"After owner Terry Pegula went out of his way to state that the former coaching staff pushed for the receiver to be drafted, Brady publicly supported Coleman," Getzenberg wrote.

"Questions, however, remain: Coleman is working as if he'll be back in 2026, but is the relationship there? Would there be interested teams that he could be traded to? Or does it make more sense to retain Coleman and see if he can take a step forward?"

More:ESPN reveals stunning cost to fix glaring Ravens issue

Coleman has Brady's backing

We know that new head coach Joe Brady is in Keon's corner, and that might be all the young receiver needs to realize his potential in 2026.

Granted, he's got a lot to prove, and a stellar offseason won't mean much unless he can translate that into on-field production when the regular season begins.

Still, there's talent in Keon; there's no doubt about that. But we've only seen it briefly.

And if the Bills do decide to move on or Keon wants out, we wonder what exactly the market would be for him.

So yes, the Bills getting a new weapon is crucial, but so too is figuring out what is the best course of action for Coleman.

More NFL news:

Pirates star pitcher Paul Skenes shares thoughts on team’s direction in exclusive sitdown

Few players are dominating baseball quite like Pirates pitcher Paul Skenes.

Just a year and a half after making his Major League debut, he’s won both National League Rookie of the Year and the Cy Young Award.

It’s clear that it’s all in the rearview for the Pirates ace. He told Channel 11 that in 2025, and he’s looking ahead to 2026.

RELATED COVERAGE >>> Paul Skenes sits down for one-on-one with Channel 11; discusses keys to success in upcoming season

He’ll join a Pirates team that had one of its more aggressive offseasons in recent memory.

With the additions of Ryan O’Hearn, Marcell Ozuna and Brandon Lowe, there was an effort to add more power to the team’s batting order.

“I can see why we went after them,” Skenes said. “We went after the right people this offseason. Obviously, the players are great, but we went after the right people. We’re a week in, so stuff’s going to change. The newness is going to fade, and we’re going to get into kind of the grind of it a little bit here soon, but once that happens, I think it’ll be really telling who we have.”

Toward the end of last season, Skenes was vocal about the team needing to take strides with player acquisition, telling 93.7 The Fan in July they needed to “consciously and intentionally” make moves to improve the team.

Skenes had at least a small role in how that came together, including calling newcomers after they signed.

“It wasn’t as extensive as people probably think,” he told Channel 11. “I had conversations with (General Manager Ben Cherington) and (Manager Don Kelly) at the end of the season last year and during the off-season. I talked with Donnie pretty regularly, and I talked with Ben a few times in the offseason. They weren’t really asking me for who I thought we needed. They did to an extent, but in terms of specific names, they weren’t really asking, and I wasn’t really going to give it to them just because it’s not my job.”

Still, a genuine effort from the Pirates ace as the publicly perceived window to win with Skenes in the black and gold gets smaller.

It’s outside chatter Skenes already had to navigate during his first full season in Major League Baseball last year.

“You do your best to block as much outside noise as possible,” Skenes said. “It’s impossible to block it all, but the moves that we’ve made this off-season and the core that we’ve had from last season and two years ago that’s coming into this year, we have a lot of really good guys that have been here that are getting better. Obviously, we brought in some really good players. So, the ball’s in our court with that. We can win if we want to. We just got to go out there and take it.”

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Fletcher comments on Carrick visit after Youth Cup win at Oxford

Fletcher comments on Carrick visit after Youth Cup win at Oxford
Fletcher comments on Carrick visit after Youth Cup win at Oxford

Manchester United Under-18s head coach Darren Fletcher has welcomed Michael Carrick’s decision to attend the club’s FA Youth Cup tie at Oxford United.

Carrick was in the stands for Wednesday’s match at the Kassam Stadium, with Fletcher speaking to club media in comments published on Thursday.

United’s youngsters won 4-1 on the night, with Albert Mills, JJ Gabriel, Chido Obi and Noah Ajayi all scoring.

The result puts the young Reds into a home quarter-final, with Sunderland or Brighton & Hove Albion set to provide the opposition.

Carrick joins staff on Youth Cup trip

Carrick has attended multiple Academy fixtures since taking charge of the first team in January, as he continues to monitor the club’s emerging talent.

Despite difficult conditions and the travel involved, the head coach made the journey to Oxford and back.

He was joined by assistant coaches Travis Binnion and Jonny Evans for the Youth Cup outing.

Fletcher keeps focus on the pitch

Fletcher said he did not highlight Carrick’s presence to the players before kick-off.

“I’m not sure if they were aware of it, to be honest,” Fletcher said.

The Under-18s coach explained he wanted his side to stay focused on their job, rather than feel added pressure.

“I didn’t want to draw their attention to it, to add more pressure, so, ultimately, it’s just great they were there.”

Fletcher also stressed the wider value of senior staff watching Academy matches in person.

“I think, ultimately, the biggest thing is that they are there to support, they are there to get their eyes on the players and it’s amazing.”

United’s Under-18s will now turn their attention to the quarter-final at home, with Sunderland and Brighton due to meet on Tuesday 24 February.

Featured image Carl Recine via Getty Images

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Kansas fans duped into believing Darryn Peterson has wildest clause in his NIL contract

Kansas fans duped into believing Darryn Peterson has wildest clause in his NIL contract originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Kansas fans were briefly duped this week by a fake social media post claiming star freshman Darryn Peterson had a controversial clause in his NIL contract.

“Darryn Peterson has a clause in his NIL contract that states he can sub out of any game if he’s visibly broken a sweat and Kansas leads by 15 or more points,” a fabricated post attributed to a user named Scott Hughes on X read. The post added, “Peterson has no known medical conditions.”

The claim quickly circulated among frustrated fans already questioning Peterson’s availability. But the falsehood gained traction because of growing scrutiny surrounding Peterson’s playing time. 

INSANITY: Darryn Peterson has a clause in his NIL contract that states he can sub out of any game if he’s visibly broken a sweat and Kansas leads by 15 or more points.

Peterson has no known medical conditions.

— Scott Hughes (@ScottHughesCBB) February 19, 2026

The projected No. 1 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft has appeared in 15 of Kansas’ 26 games this season while dealing with quad cramping, a hamstring strain and an ankle injury. He also was a late scratch against No. 1 Arizona with flu-like symptoms. In Wednesday’s 81-69 victory over Oklahoma State, Peterson scored a team-high 23 points but did not play the final 17:22. It marked the third time this season he exited a game early.

More:Ernie Johnson makes personal announcement before March Madness

Kansas coach Bill Self called getting just 18 minutes from Peterson “disappointing,” underscoring the tension as the Jayhawks remain in the Big 12 title hunt.

The fake post may have been fiction, but it tapped into real unease among Jayhawks fans trying to understand the new NIL era and wondering when their star will be consistently available.

More college basketball news:

Las Vegas Raiders make decision on Geno Smith’s future

The NFL‘s new league year is approaching, and with that comes a multitude of decisions by NFL teams. Some decisions are easy, some are difficult.

The Las Vegas Raiders have had to make a decision on quarterback Geno Smith. It appears they have made one ahead of the new league year set to begin in a few weeks.

MORE: Three teams that are looking at free agent quarterback Malik Willis

According to reports, the Raiders will release Smith if they cannot trade him before March 11th. While it isn’t a major shock, it is curious.

The Raiders will release Geno Smith ahead of the new league year, which will clear the way for No. 1 overall pick Fernando Mendoza to start immediately.

Smith’s 2026-27 salary is set to become fully guaranteed on the third day of the new league year, if not traded or released. pic.twitter.com/KeGZt1D8ix

— Evan Sidery (@esidery) February 19, 2026

One might think the Raiders could have kept him to provide a veteran presence around the imminent first-round pick, Fernando Mendoza. However, this might be the best decision for a couple of reasons.

First, the most obvious one is contract-related money. Smith’s contract is set to be guaranteed three days after the new league year begins. That’s an extra $8M that can be put towards other acquisitions.

MORE: Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs make huge decision on contract

The last one is simple: a fresh start for both parties. The Raiders hired former Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll, who pushed for and was granted the trade for Smith from Seattle.

Dec 28, 2025; Paradise, Nevada, USA; Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Geno Smith (7) looks to throw in the third quarter against the New York Giants at Allegiant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

The duo didn’t pan out, and Carroll was let go after the season. It makes sense that Smith will also depart, as he certainly will have other opportunities to at least compete for a job.

What was once praised as a phenomenal trade acquisition concludes after only one season. Smith’s dead-cap hit will be $18.5M–a very manageable one for a quarterback contract.

Enjoy free coverage of the top news & trending stories on The Big Lead

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The post Las Vegas Raiders make decision on Geno Smith’s future appeared first on The Big Lead.

Jaren Jackson Jr: Eight years with the Grizzlies …

Jaren Jackson Jr: Eight years with the Grizzlies organization, with this CITY, these fans…… It’s been a journey. When we were rolling, there was nothing you could say. Nothing. FedExForum was JUMPING. If you don’t remember that, then I guess you just weren’t really there. But I guess it’s like they say: All good things must come to an end. I remember after getting the news, I walked in the locker room looking at my phone, about to shower. I already had a text from Lauri, welcoming me to Utah. But one thing I’ll never forget was a moment in the locker room before I left, when everyone was joking around again. And it was just so weird because in my head it was like, Wow, this is the last time I’m gonna see this.

The Players' Tribune

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: Jaren Jackson Jr: Eight years with the Grizzlies …

Jaren Jackson Jr: Then 2022 hit. All Access was coming …

Jaren Jackson Jr: Then 2022 hit. All Access was coming to town. ESPN was coming to town. Rappers are court side. Everyone is a believer — fully. We started off with no expectations and blew the league out of the water. Everything was clicking. I remember we went on a 11-game win streak, and then Dillon’s birthday fell right after that so we were turnt up. Taylor had that energy. He would have break-bread dinners, we’d go bowling, play kickball, have staff games, three-on-three, we’d have staff one-on-one. We went to a baseball field and played baseball with custom jerseys. We went to an escape room. We would do a ton of stuff together, like real wholesome. Haha. Basically, we weren’t trying to sit in a hotel.

The Players' Tribune

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: Jaren Jackson Jr: Then 2022 hit. All Access was coming …

I’m not afraid to admit that it weighed on us at …

Jaren Jackson Jr: We made them at a very high point in our careers, with a lot of eyes on us. And when we were still just learning how to grow up as men. You gotta understand, there were things we had to deal with in our private lives — taking care of our families, some of us raising kids and these kinds of things. I’m not afraid to admit that it weighed on us at times. I know people said we needed to be more professional to get over that hump — I’ll be honest, I don’t necessarily agree with that. Professionalism comes from how you prepare, and behind the scenes, we were an Xs and Os team. We practiced hard and worked out even harder. There’s just no way anyone worked harder than us. But in the end, I guess it just wasn’t enough.

The Players' Tribune

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: I’m not afraid to admit that it weighed on us at …

Adam Silver told GMs there will be anti-tanking rules for 2026-27 per ESPN

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver told the league's 30 general managers in a meeting Thursday that the league plans to make rule changes to curb "tanking" -- the catch-all term for moves that prioritize draft positioning over winning -- ESPN's Shams Charania reported Thursday.

The Pacers were fined $100,000 last week for a violation of the Player Participation Policy in a move that Silver later said was meant to be a sign that the league would be cracking down on behavior it considered tanking. The Pacers -- who are 15-40 and enter Thursday's game against the Wizards in a virtual tie with Washington for last place in the Eastern Conference -- were fined for holding out All-Star forward Pascal Siakam and two other starters in their Feb. 3 home loss to the Utah Jazz. The Jazz were also fined $500,000 for holding out stars Lauri Markkanen and Jaren Jackson Jr. in the fourth quarters of games that were in doubt.

Charania reported that at Thursday's meeting and a late January meeting of the NBA Competition Committee, several anti-tanking concepts were discussed. Among those concepts, Charania reported, were the following.

>> First round picks moved in trades would only be allowed to be "protected" in the top four or beyond pick No. 14.

>> The lottery odds could freeze at the trade deadline or some later date.

>> Teams could not be allowed to pick in the top four in consecutive years and/or consecutive bottom-three finishes.

>> Teams could not be allowed to pick in the top four the year after making the conference finals.

>> Lottery odds could be allocated on two-year records rather than one-year records.

>> The Lottery could be extended to include all play-in teams, including those who reach the best-of-seven playoffs.

>> All lottery teams could have flat lottery odds as opposed to giving better odds for the worst teams.

This year's draft would not be impacted, but several of those suggestions seem connected to the Pacers' situation. The Pacers reached the Eastern Conference Finals in 2024 and 2025 and reached the NBA Finals in 2025 for the first time in 25 years. However, All-Star point guard Tyrese Haliburton tore his right Achilles tendon in Game 7 of the Finals and set the stage for an injury-ravaged season that put the Pacers near the bottom of the standings all season.

The Pacers made a trade just before the deadline that brought center Ivica Zubac in from the Clippers and sent Los Angeles two players and three draft picks. That includes a conditional pick for 2026. The Pacers get to keep the pick if is one of the top four or if it goes up to No. 10 or higher, and in that case the Clippers instead get the Pacers' 2031 first-round pick. However, the Clippers get the pick if it is in the 5-9 range.

That has increased the motivation for the Pacers to increase their draft lottery odds. The only moves that have stood out as ones that could be considered tanking have been the Pacers' decisions to rest Siakam and multiple other starters in four games before the All-Star break, all of which were in the second night of back-to-backs.

Dustin Dopirak covers the Pacers all season. Get more coverage on IndyStarTV and with the Pacers Insider newsletter.

This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: NBA tanking: Adam Silver told GMs 2026-27 will have anti-tanking rules

Thunder provide injury updates for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams, Ajay Mitchell

Jan 13, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Oklahoma City Thunder guard/forward Jalen Williams (8) celebrates with guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) after he scored against the San Antonio Spurs during the second half at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

The Oklahoma City Thunder will continue to be without three of their best players for a little while longer. They announced injury updates for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jalen Williams and Ajay Mitchell on Thursday.

Gilgeous-Alexander will be re-evaluated in one week. He's dealing with an abdominal strain that's already cost him five games before the NBA All-Star break happened. Mitchell will also be re-evaluated in one week. He's dealing with an abdominal strain and now an ankle sprain that has cost him a month.

Williams will be re-evaluated in two weeks. He's dealing with his second hamstring strain. He sustained last week in the penultimate game before the NBA All-Star break. He re-aggravated the injury and will be out at least three weeks because of it.

Just brutal updates overall. The Thunder will be without the trio against the Brooklyn Nets on Friday, Feb. 20; against the Cleveland Cavaliers on Sunday, Feb. 22; at the Toronto Raptors on Tuesday, Feb. 24; at the Detroit Pistons on Wednesday, Feb. 25.

Afterward, perhaps Gilgeous-Alexander and Mitchell will return. Meanwhile, the earlier Williams can return will be on Saturday, Mar. 7 against the Golden State Warriors. He's set to miss a minimum of nine games with this second hamstring strain.

We'll see how OKC does in this stretch. At least the All-Star break bought them a week. But suddenly, having the first seed doesn't look as guaranteed as it did a month ago. Injuries continue to plague the Thunder. You just hope they don't translate over to the NBA playoffs.

This article originally appeared on OKC Thunder Wire: Thunder offer injury updates for Gilgeous-Alexander, Williams, Mitchell

Ronda Rousey, Gina Carano reportedly will undergo ‘a lot of medicals’ ahead of Netflix fight

Ronda Rousey

Ronda Rousey and Gina Carano will undergo a lot of medical testing ahead of their upcoming fight.

Rousey and Carano meet in a five-round featherweight headliner at Most Valuable Promotions’ first-ever mixed martial arts event on May 16 in Los Angeles. The event streams exclusively on Netflix.

Since the bout was announced, many have commented about the health concerns surrounding the bout, both in regard to the age of the two fighters and their lengthy layoffs. Rousey hasn’t competed in nearly a decade following back-to-back brutal knockout losses to Holly Holm and Amanda Nunes, while Carano has been out of action for nearly 17 years after getting stopped by Cris Cyborg.

Additionally, Rousey has publicly opened up about concussion issues over the years. Speaking with ESPN, CSAC executive director Andy Foster says both women will go through extensive medical testing ahead of the bout.

“We’re going to put her through neurological and concussion battery testing and make sure she’s OK,” Foster said of Rousey. “We’re going to have our doctors take a look. The fighters are going to have to do a lot of medicals, both of ’em.”

Carano’s loss to Cyborg was the only one of her career as she shifted into the acting world. Rousey transitioned to the pro wrestling world, where she had a lengthy run with WWE.

Foster understands the concerns in sanctioning the bout, but if both women are cleared to compete, the bout will happen as scheduled.

“As long as these women pass their medicals and pass all their neurological batteries and do the things they need to do, there’s nothing wrong with this fight,” Foster explained.

Spring training open thread: February 19

NORTH PORT, FL - FEBRUARY 23: A general interior view of CoolToday Park during the Spring Training game between the Detroit Tigers and the Atlanta Braves at CoolToday Park on February 23, 2020 in North Port, Florida. The Tigers defeated the Braves 5-1. (Photo by Mark Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

We’re not too far away from seeing actual spring training games! Excited yet?

The floor is now yours and here’s a random clip:

CAN 2025 final: heavy sentences handed down to Senegalese supporters

CAN 2025 final: heavy sentences handed down to Senegalese supporters
CAN 2025 final: heavy sentences handed down to Senegalese supporters

CAN 2025: 18 Senegalese fans hit with severe penalties

CAN 2025 final: heavy sentences handed down to Senegalese supporters

Moroccan justice has delivered its final verdict following the incidents that took place on the sidelines of the CAN 2025 final between Morocco and Senegal. Eighteen Senegalese supporters have been found guilty of assault and sentenced by the High Court of Rabat to prison terms without suspension.

In a statement circulated by judicial authorities, it was specified: "The High Court of Rabat has sentenced 18 Senegalese supporters for acts of aggression. Nine were sentenced to one year in prison and a $500 fine each. Six received six-month prison sentences and $200 fines each. Three were handed three-month prison terms and $120 fines each."

This ruling brings to a close a tense episode that had cast a shadow over the conclusion of the continental tournament.

How to live stream New York Knicks vs Detroit Pistons: NBA, TV channel

The New York Knicks are rolling into Thursday night with momentum and a chance to make a statement when they host the Detroit Pistons at Madison Square Garden. You can catch all the NBA action live at 7:30 pm ET on Prime Video.

MORE: Kevin Durant makes strong statement on latest Twitter burner accounts drama

How to Watch New York Knicks vs Detroit Pistons

Feb 6, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham (2) dribbles defended by New York Knicks guard Landry Shamet (44) in the first half at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Image



  • When: Thursday, February 19, 2026
  • Time: 7:30 p.m. ET
  • TV channel: Prime Video exclusive
  • Live stream: Prime Video (Try for Free)

New York enters the matchup having won 10 of its last 12 games, including a 138-89 blowout of the Philadelphia 76ers to close out the All-Star break. The Knicks have quietly become one of the most efficient offensive teams in the league, pushing pace, shooting at a high clip from three, and controlling the glass on both ends.

Jalen Brunson continues to anchor everything, averaging around 27 points and more than six assists per game while maintaining control in late-game situations. Karl-Anthony Towns has provided interior scoring and spacing, and Mikal Bridges has added consistent perimeter production. The recent surge has pushed the Knicks toward the top tier of the Eastern Conference standings while tightening their defense. New York has held most of their opponents under 110 points during this stretch.

But Thursday isn’t just about the Knicks’ hot run. The Detroit Pistons arrive in Manhattan as one of the league’s biggest surprises.

– Watch Knicks vs Pistons on Prime Video –

Detroit has maintained a front-of-the-conference record despite dealing with lineup absences earlier in the week. The Pistons have leaned on disciplined team defense, ranking among the NBA leaders in points allowed, and they’ve closed out games with poise. All-Star guard Cade Cunningham has been the engine, averaging over 25 points and nearly 10 assists while controlling tempo in crunch time. Tobias Harris has provided veteran scoring stability, and Ausar Thompson’s two-way versatility has been critical in transition and on defense.

If there’s extra motivation for New York, it’s this: Detroit has controlled the season series so far. The Pistons posted convincing wins in January and again in early February, exposing defensive lapses and limiting the Knicks’ perimeter rhythm. The rematch at Madison Square Garden offers New York a chance to flip that narrative.

This matchup has all the ingredients of a playoff preview: two of the Eastern Conference’s top teams, elite guard play, and defensive identity on both sides. The Garden crowd should bring energy, but Detroit has shown it’s comfortable playing spoiler on the road.

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Barrios Mean Mugs Garcia In ‘Sin City’

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - FEBRUARY 19: Mario Barrios (L) and Ryan Garcia (R) face off during a press conference ahead of their WBC Welterweight Title Fight at MGM Grand Hotel & Casino on February 19, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Cris Esqueda/Golden Boy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mario Barrios and Ryan Garcia came face-to-face once again earlier today (Thurs., Feb, 19, 2026) in Las Vegas, Nevada at the conclusion of their final press conference ahead of their highly-anticipated WBC welterweight boxing match scheduled for Sat., Feb. 21 in “Sin City” streaming live on DAZN PPV.

Watch the press conference video replay here.

This is Barrios’ fourth major headlining title fight, and one could argue it could be the one that could catapult him into the next level of stardom with a win over someone with the popularity-level as Garcia. That said, “El Azteca” has been in there with the best of them, including Tank Davis and Manny Pacquiao, so there isn’t anything “King Ry” can bring to the table that he hasn’t already seen before.

For Garcia, this is his opportunity to put his past troubles behind him by winning a major world title, which has alluded him his entire career. And it’s also a huge fight for him in more ways than one since he claims that after the fight he will no longer be a part of Golden Boy Promotions and will be looking for a new promoter to partner up with.

Check out their staredown in the video player embedded above.

Also, Oscar de La Hoya showed off the new diamond-encrusted pendant that the winner of the title fight will win, along with a shiny new belt.

The winner of this fight will receive a WBC World Championship chain & glove pendant 💎

🎟️ Buy BARRIOS VS GARCIA HERE –> https://t.co/FoiaUucI53#TheRingHighStakes | Feb 21 | Live Exclusively on DAZN | @RingMagazine ▪️ pic.twitter.com/ymSvYaMVfT

— DAZN Boxing (@DAZNBoxing) February 19, 2026

Take that, Zuffa.


To order “Barrios vs. Garcia” on DAZN PPV click here.

Why did Alysa Liu come back? Figure skater's career, retirement

For the first time in a generation, Team USA has a gold-medal winner in individual women's figure skating.

Alysa Liu stood on the top of the podium at the Milano Ice Skating Arena after taking a victory lap with an American flag wrapped around her shoulders. She'd won behind an incredible free skate performance that pushed her from third to first place.

In doing so, she became the first U.S. figure skater to win a women's individual gold medal in figure skating since Sarah Hughes did it in 2002.

WE CAN FEEL ALYSA AND HER COACHES' JOY THROUGH OUR SCREEN. 🥹 #WinterOlympicspic.twitter.com/tEewvT8Aym

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 19, 2026

Forest 'enjoy' themselves for perfect start under Pereira

Vitor Pereira passes on instructions to his players
Vítor Pereira has never lost his first game in charge of a club in 15 attempts [Reuters]

Vitor Pereira asked his Nottingham Forest players to "express themselves" prior to their commanding victory at Fenerbahce in the first leg of their Europa League knockout round play-off tie.

It could not have gone much better for the Portuguese in his first game in charge of the club, who recorded their biggest ever win away from home in European competition.

Goals from Murillo, Igor Jesus and captain Morgan Gibbs-White underpinned a dominant Forest performance that could arguably have delivered an even more emphatic winning margin.

Pereira told TNT Sports: "We had chance to score two more goals. It was a very good result. It is only half-time, we need to be consistent, the schedule is tight and difficult.

"Everyone must be ready to help the team. This is what I ask them.

"I realised before I came that the players have a lot of quality. They need results but they need to enjoy the game.

"If they enjoy the way they are playing they can have a high level. They need organisation and confidence. I asked them to express themselves on the pitch. They did it."

Sitting fourth bottom in the Premier League, just three points above the relegation zone, Forest's main aim is to stay up.

However, extending their first European campaign since 1995-96 would also boost confidence at club that twice won the European Cup under Brian Clough.

And Forest, who host Fenerbahce in the second leg at the City Ground on Thursday, 26 February (20:00 GMT), are now strong favourites to reach the last 16 where they will face either Midtjylland or Real Betis.

'We will have a real identity'

One of the biggest issues for Forest this term is Pereira is now their fourth manager, with Nuno Espirito Santo, Ange Postecoglou and Sean Dyche favouring different styles of play during their spells.

However, captain Morgan Gibbs-White, said the players had little trouble adapting to 57-year-old Pereira's demands.

"I felt we had a real identity out there. We defended well and we created so many chances," said the England midfielder.

"His message to us is that we will have a real identity how we play and defend as a team. We have all bought into what he wants straight away.

"It is about learning off each other and taking it game by game. We needed a clean sheet and we needed a win and today felt like the perfect moment.

"We have been going through a difficult time, confidence is the main thing and tonight will boost confidence. We just have to stay together and be the most complete team."

Alysa Liu is happiest figure skater on Earth — and Olympic champion

MILAN — Alysa Liu arrived at the Olympic figure skating venue Thursday night hopping up and down, more excited for her teammate Amber Glenn than herself. She had watched Glenn’s stellar long program on the shuttle bus over to the Milano Ice Skating Arena and was cheering all the way. Now all she wanted to do was find Glenn and give her a hug.

Liu was an hour and a half away from skating her Olympic long program on what turned out to be the most important night of her life, but instead of worrying about that, she was thinking about someone else: A teammate and a dear friend.

It should then come as no surprise at all that when all was said and done, the most caring, carefree, selfless, happy and optimistic skater in the women’s competition just won the Olympic gold medal.

The Alysa Liu story is absolutely remarkable and utterly unprecedented in figure skating history: She won her first national title at 13. She won her second national title at 14. She retired at 16. She unretired at 18. She won the world championship at 19.

And she just won the Olympic gold medal at 20.

“I literally can’t process this,” Liu laughed as she realized that neither of the two Japanese skaters who came after her could pass her. “There’s no way.”

Liu did not just break the 20-year U.S. Olympic medal drought in women’s figure skating, she obliterated it. Skating with a freedom rarely seen at such an intense moment, especially in this year’s nerve-wracking Olympic skating competition, Liu performed an exquisitely delightful, smooth and error-free long program to Donna Summer’s "MacArthur Park," then sat back and watched Japan’s Kaori Sakamoto and Ami Nakai struggle just enough to secure the first U.S. women’s gold medal in figure skating since Sarah Hughes won the 2002 Olympic title in Salt Lake City.

She didn't know it yet, but Alysa Liu's spectacular free skate would win her Olympic GOLD. 👏 #WinterOlympicspic.twitter.com/LzMCkvwGMf

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 19, 2026

Liu edged out Sakamoto, the three-time world champion and 2022 Olympic bronze medalist, 226.79 points to 224.90. Nakai, the 17-year-old who led the competition after the short program, won the bronze medal with 219.16 points. Glenn rose from 13th to fifth with 214.91 points. 

When Nakai’s score came up and Liu realized she won, she didn’t do what champions often do and stand alone in triumph. No, she spent her time hugging Nakai and then Sakamoto before finally standing alone just long enough for the cameras to put her on the big screen by herself, and the audience to roar in approval. 

Then Liu laughed, and smiled, and laughed some more. The happiest figure skater on earth was Olympic champion. 

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Alysa Liu's Olympic gold medal is a win for figure skating

Alysa Liu wins gold for U.S. in women's figure skating at Winter Olympics

Alysa Liu won a gold medal in women's individual figure skating on Thursday, making her the first U.S. woman to take the Olympic podium in the event since 2006. Japan's Kaori Sakamoto took silver and Ami Nakai, also of Japan, took the bronze.

The last American woman to earn a medal in individual figure skating was Sasha Cohen, who took home silver in 2006. Sarah Hughes was the last American woman to take home a gold medal, in 2002 — four years before Liu was even born. Michelle Kwan also won a bronze medal at those Olympics. This is Liu's second gold medal.  

"I just like, can't process this. There's no way," Liu could be heard telling her coaches as she walked down the hallway after winning. 

Alysa Liu celebrates after winning gold at the Milan Cortina Olympic Games, with silver medalist Kaori Sakamoto to her left and bronze medalist Ami Nakai to her right. / Credit: Gabriel Bouys /AFP via Getty Images

Liu, 20, started the free skate in third place, behind Japan's Nakai and Sakamoto, following the short program on Tuesday. Isabeau Levito, 18, was in eighth place, while Amber Glenn, 26, was in 13th place after an error in her short program. 

Glenn was the first U.S. skater to take the ice for her free skate. After failing to complete a triple loop on Tuesday, her score going into the free skate was 67.39. During Thursday's skate, she nailed a triple axel, though she had to catch herself with her hand after nearly falling during her final loop. She scored 147.52, for a total score of 214.91.

Amber Glenn competes at the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games on February 19, 2026. / Credit: Jamie Squire / Getty Images

Photos captured Glenn embracing her coach after her skate. Glenn looked visibly thrilled, smiling and jumping for joy. Despite entering the free skate in 13th place, she was at the top of the leaderboard for much of the event, finally being unseated by Japanese skater Mone Chiba. Glenn ended the competition in fifth place, and Chiba took fourth place.

Liu praised Glenn's pop-scored comeback in a brief interview with an NBC Olympics correspondent.  

"She did so good. I watched it on the bus on the way here, and aw, she killed it, and I'm really happy for her," Liu said. 

Levito was the next American woman to skate. She took the ice with a score of 70.84 from her short program. She fell on the landing of her opening triple flip, losing nine points, but recovered to skate through the rest of her routine.  

Isabeau Levito competes at the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games on February 19, 2026. / Credit: Piero Cruciatti /AFP via Getty Images

Levito looked disappointed after leaving the ice, even as Glenn cheered for her. She also appeared emotional as her score of 131.96 was read out. Levito racked up a total score of 202.80 and came in 12th overall. 

Liu was the final U.S. competitor and the third-to-last skater to take the ice. She looked at ease during her warmup, waving to spectators as she rehearsed. She entered the rink with a score of 76.59 after her carefree short program. Liu looked casual and energetic during her free skate, sailing through a triple lutz and triple salchow. She had a broad smile on her face throughout the event, and the crowd roared every time she landed a jump. 

Alysa Liu competes at the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games on February 19, 2026. / Credit: Piero Cruciatti /AFP via Getty Images

Liu looked particularly at ease during her choreographic step sequences, and ended the routine triumphantly as her family rose for a standing ovation.  

Liu's score was 150.20, for a total score of 226.79. 

"That's what the f*** I'm talking about!" she shouted to the camera after finishing her skate. She bounced off the ice to hug her coaches and could be heard saying, "That was so great!" as they handed her her skate guards. Glenn and Liu were also seen hugging. 

"I was so calm when I started," Liu said following the competition. "I have this breathing technique that I use throughout this program, and I was just making sure to lock in on that, be as smooth as I can and look out into the crowd during all my transitions."

"I did that, and I felt everyone's energy. I felt my energy," she said, adding that she felt she "put it all out there." 

On whether she is glad to have returned to the sport in 2024, after having retired at 16 following the Beijing 2022 Winter Games, Liu said: "It was just right."

Sakamoto earned silver for her skate to a medley of Edith Piaf songs. She missed a triple jump, but otherwise skated cleanly, and embraced Liu after she came off the ice. 

Alysa Liu and Ami Nakai of Team Japan celebrate after competing in the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games.  / Credit: Jamie Squire / Getty Images

Nakai struggled with some of her jumps, but the high difficulty score of her routine meant she still took home the bronze medal. Liu and Nakai also hugged after Nakai's score was read out.

The United States also took gold in the team skating event earlier in the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Games. 

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Sebastian Hoeneß applauds Stuttgart’s efficiency

Sebastian Hoeneß applauds Stuttgart’s efficiency
Sebastian Hoeneß applauds Stuttgart’s efficiency

VfB Stuttgart narrowly missed out on an automatic qualification to the Round of 16 in the Europa League, but they’re now in a great position to do so after a 4-1 win against Celtic in Glasgow. Sebastian Hoeneß broke down how the game went in his post-match interview.

“Our players knew what was at stake today,” said Stuttgart’s head coach. “They delivered a very focused performance. We had phases where we were under pressure and had to defend as a team.

“We played with great control for long stretches. We showed efficiency. In the end, we scored a very important goal to make the result even more decisive. Now we want to seal the deal and advance to the next round. We won't make the mistake of thinking it's all over now. We have to be fully ready again in a week.”

Stuttgart will play against Bundesliga’s bottom-placed team Heidenheim before the home leg against Celtic next Thursday. If they complete the job as expected, they will face either Porto or Braga in the Round of 16. The draw will be made a day after the end of the playoff round.

Half Moon Bay girls given monumental task in CCS Open Division basketball opener

Half Moon Bay's Zoey Lemoge (50) had 18 points and 18 rebounds in last year's 48-40 state title game loss to Whitney-Cerritos. HMB begins CCS Open Division play Friday at national No. 2 Mitty. (Ralph Thompson)

Fresh off a stirring Peninsula Athletic League Bay Division championship, the Half Moon Bay girls basketball team was rewarded with a Central Coast Section Open Division berth on Wednesday. 

With it, comes an automatic bid into the CIF Northern California championships, where the Cougars won a Division 4 title last season. 

That's the good news. 

The bad news is the eighth-seeded Cougars (19-5) open CCS Open Pool A play Friday at Mitty (22-2), the nation's No. 3 team according to the MaxPreps computer rankings. The other Pool A game pits fifth-seed St. Francis (18-6) at No. 4 St. Ignatius (18-6). Both games tip off at 6 p.m.

In Pool B action, No. 7 Alisal-Salinas (22-2) travels to No. 2 Woodside Priory (19-5) at 7 p.m. and third-seed Riordan (15-7) hosts No. 6 Pinewood-Los Altos Hills (20-4) at 6 p.m. 

Each pool entry is guaranteed three games with the winners of each to face off for the championship Feb. 27 at USF. All CCS playoff pairings were announced on Wednesday.

Half Moon Bay, which lost 48-40 in the state D4 championship to Whitney-Cerrito last season, clinched the league title with a 52-44 home win over Menlo-Atherton on Saturday behind 20 points from Xochitl Nieves (13 coming in the fourth quarter) and 16 from Zoey Lemoge.

Lemoge, a 6-foot senior, had 18 points and 18 rebounds in last season's state final. On Friday, she'll largely be responsible for guarding McDonald's All-American and two-time Chronicle Metro Player of the Year McKenna Woliczko, who hasn't missed a beat since coming back from a torn ACL which kept her out of play for a calendar year. 

The 6-2 Iowa signee finished her senior regular season with a 24-point, 18-rebound performance in 15 minutes of Mitty's 74-31 win over St. Francis on Tuesday. Woliczko, who returned Jan. 2, averaged 22.5 points, 11.2 rebounds, 2.8 assists and 1.9 steals per game in West Catholic Athletic League play, while shooting 74% from the field, 81% from the foul line and 38% on 3-pointers. 

She's hardly a one-person squad, though, as the Monarchs are blessed with numerous future college players, including seniors Devin Cosgriff (Michigan-signee) and Emma Cook (UC San Diego). Sophomore Maliya Hunter, the 2025 WCAL Player of the Year, and juniors Ze'ni Patterson, Tee McCarthy and Zi Patterson are other top recruits. 

The CCS playoffs begin for boys and girls in all six divisions on Friday. Other top girls seeds are Menlo-Atherton (Division 1), Valley Christian (D2), Mills-Milbrae (D3), Notre Dame-Belmont (D4) and Palma-Salinas (D5). 

CCS boys: Coming off Riordan's remarkable 100-95 double-overtime win over St. Ignatius to close the WCAL season on Tuesday, the two teams are the top seeded Open Division teams entering pool play Friday. 

Riordan (23-1) opens Pool A play at home against WCAL rival Serra (13-11) at 7:30 p.m., while No. 5 The King's Academy-Sunnyvale (21-3) plays at No. 4 Bellarmine (16-8). In pool B action, St. Ignatius (21-3) hosts No. 7 Menlo-Atherton (23-3) and No. 6 Valley Christian (14-10) plays at No. 3 Mitty (15-9). Both of those games start at 7:30 p.m.

NCS boys: In North Coast Section Division 2 play on Wednesday, Thomas Meehleib had 31 points and six assists, Sam Newmeyer added 20 points and Lucas Lau contributed 17 points and nine assists as top-seed and host University opened with a 95-66 win over Pinole Valley. University (24-5) hosts Casa Grande-Petaluma (21-8), a 74-49 winner over Lick-Wilmerding, Saturday in quarterfinal play at 7 p.m. … David Isola had 36 points and Sammy Cetoute added 20 for Casa Grande in its first-round win. … Salesian-Richmond transfer Ronnie Selleaze had 35 points, 15 rebounds and 10 assists leading seventh-seed San Lorenzo to a 65-55 first-round win over Heritage-Brentwood. San Lorenzo (17-10) now travels to second-seed Cardinal Newman-Santa Rosa (27-2), a 61-45 winner over Justin-Siena-Napa. AJ Cole and Zion Cargill combined for 23 points for Cardinal Newman, which has won 21 straight. … Sophomore Mahal McBride had 20 points leading 11th seed El Cerrito (23-6) to a 59-53 win at No. 6 McKinleyville (Humboldt County). The Gauchos next play St. Mary's-Berkeley (18-10), a 77-60 home winner over Pittsburg.

NCS girls: In D2 play on Wednesday, Lauren Keller had 19 points, Caiden Grimmer 13 and Haven Stone 11 leading third-seed Justin-Siena to a 67-38 win over Washington-San Francisco. … Fourth-seed University (18-11) dropped a 48-44 home game to No. 13 Sonoma Valley (21-8), which was led by Alice Turner's 19 points. … Defending state D3 champion Marin Catholic-Kentfield (12-14), the seventh seed, upended No. 10 Ukiah 49-41 behind 14 points from Brooke Spagnuolo. Marin Catholic now travels to second-seed Moreau Catholic-Hayward (21-6), a 72-36 winner over Fortuna behind 33 points by Mahlaysia Atkins.

Freelance writer Mitch Stephens has covered high school sports for the Chronicle since 2001. Email: mitch@scorebooklive.com

This article originally published at Half Moon Bay girls given monumental task in CCS Open Division basketball opener.

Vikings Connected to Risky Reclamation QB

Vikings Connected to Risky Reclamation QB
Doug Engle/Ocala Star Banner and the Gainesville Sun / USA TODAY NETWORK

After a Minnesota Vikings win in 2024, head coach Kevin O’Connell greeted Indianapolis Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson at midfield, telling him to keep his chin up after a recent demotion. A year and a half later, Richardson has been suggested as the Vikings’ big offseason quarterback addition.

Richardson remains a volatile bet, but Minnesota’s QB situation keeps his name in the conversation as a swing-for-upside option.

Minnesota will add another quarterback next to J.J. McCarthy in the coming weeks, and according to Bleacher Report, the Vikings should be on a shortlist for a Richardson trade.

Richardson Talk Lingers as Vikings QB Board Widens

Your Richardson agendas are alive and well.

Anthony Richardson taking the field before a Colts game at Lucas Oil Stadium. Anthony Richardson Vikings trade.
Indianapolis Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson (5) runs onto the field before kickoff against the Jacksonville Jaguars at Lucas Oil Stadium on Sept 10, 2023, in Indianapolis. The former first-round pick prepared for his NFL debut as the Colts opened their regular season at home. © Jenna Watson/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK

BR: Vikings Make Sense for a Richardson Trade

BR’s Alex Kay sized up four destinations for Richardson, and in addition to the Cleveland Browns, San Francisco 49ers, and Pittsburgh Steelers, Minnesota got a nod.

He wrote, “After going 14-3 with Sam Darnold at the helm in 2024, the Minnesota Vikings could be in the market for another rehabilitation project. Richardson would fit the bill as a promising talent who hasn’t come close to meeting the lofty expectations set by his first-round draft position.”

“While Minnesota will be working to build up J.J. McCarthy after a rough sophomore campaign, the No. 10 overall pick in 2024 has proved to be injury-prone early in his NFL career. He already missed his entire rookie season and seven games in 2025, making quarterback depth a priority this offseason.”

Richardson isn’t a dream fit for the Vikings’ current offense, but he does have the raw tools to mature into a long-term QB1 if nurtured properly.

Kay added, “O’Connell seems to believe Richardson has real potential to develop into a superstar despite the rough start to his career. After his Vikings bested the Colts midway through the 2024 season — a game Richardson spent on the bench backing up Joe Flacco — O’Connell went out of his way to heap praise upon the young QB.”

“Richardson could do far worse than landing in the Twin Cities this offseason. He’ll have a fantastic opportunity to develop his game and could even end up starting if McCarthy goes down with another injury in 2026.”

The IND Experiment Winding Down

Last offseason, the Vikings attempted to re-sign Daniel Jones, but he preferred the Colts as his free-agent destination because he figured he could win a starting job there over Richardson, while McCarthy felt like the preordained starter. Ultimately, Jones was correct.

He toppled Richardson somewhat easily during training camp and in the preseason, paving the way for Jones as the unabashed QB1, which he rewarded the Colts by starting the 2025 season white-hot.

Jones would later tear his Achilles tendon, but Richardson was battling an injury, too, so the Colts had to scramble and wound up mind-bogglingly signing Philip Rivers, who hadn’t played football in five years.

Every Colts quarterback outcome in 2025 involved a quarterback not named Anthony Richardson. Therefore, it feels like he’s the odd man out and must head elsewhere.

Just Another Version of McCarthy?

The problem with a Vikings trade for Richardson? He has two shortcomings: his performance shows extreme flashes of brilliance, followed by woeful inconsistencies. He also can’t stay healthy.

Does that sound familiar? It should — those are McCarthy’s bugaboos through two seasons. Finding a way to obtain Richardson would feel like onboarding another version of McCarthy. That is — he might eventually become consistent if he can stay healthy, but no one knows if either will occur.

Anthony Richardson warming up before a Colts game against the Dolphins.
Sep 7, 2025; Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Indianapolis Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson Sr. (5) loosens up during pregame warmups at Lucas Oil Stadium on Sep 7, 2025, ahead of a matchup with the Miami Dolphins. Richardson prepared for another season under center as Indianapolis opened its 2025 campaign. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images

Kay also noted on Richardson to Minnesota, “O’Connell is considered one of the league’s premier quarterback whisperers, coaxing some truly impressive seasons out of Pro Bowlers like Kirk Cousins and Matt Stafford in addition to maximizing the talents of written-off or unheralded talent such as Darnold and Josh Dobbs.”

“Daniel Jones, the passer who edged out Richardson for Indianapolis’ starting job last year, said the handful of months spent in Minnesota with O’Connell ‘made a big impression’ on him.”

Other Trade Options

Of course, Richardson isn’t the only trade option for the 2026 Vikings. If one assumes that established quarterbacks like Joe Burrow, Justin Herbert, Lamar Jackson, Baker Mayfield, and Dak Prescott are not for sale — why would those players’ teams trade them? — a realistic list might look like this:

  • Derek Carr
  • Mac Jones
  • Drew Lock
  • Jalen Milroe
  • Jameis Winston
  • Justin Fields
  • Will Levis
  • Davis Mills
  • Kyler Murray
  • Spencer Rattler

Minnesota would also explore Malik Willis’s free agency; he’s the QB2 for the Packers, who is on the cusp of netting a handsome free-agent contract, with hopes of breaking out big in 2026.

Kevin O’Connell speaking to reporters during Vikings OTAs in Eagan.
Minnesota Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell addresses media members during OTAs at the TCO Performance Center in Eagan, Minnesota, in 2025. O’Connell, hired in 2022, has steered the franchise to one of the league’s better records through the 2024 season. Mandatory Credit: Imagn Images

Any Vikings trade for a quarterback like Richardson can happen at anytime. The team doesn’t have to wait until free agency begins on March 9th.

Richardson will turn 24 in May. Youth is his friend.


Javier Tebas addresses Barcelona role in Negreira case – “They did not pay referees”

Javier Tebas addresses Barcelona role in Negreira case – “They did not pay referees”
Javier Tebas addresses Barcelona role in Negreira case – “They did not pay referees”

The Negreira case was first broken just over three years ago, and since then, there has been a lot of focus on Barcelona and their role in the matter. Their payments to former CTA vice-president Jose Maria Enriquez Negreira are continuing to be looked into, but the Catalan club are clear that they’re innocent.

Real Madrid have been very involved in the process, but La Liga president Javier Tebas has now attempted to put them in their place. As per Sport, he spoke on the Negreira case.

“We are in a state of law and the rules are what they are. We were the first to go to the prosecutor’s office, it was not Real Madrid, and we have continued to agree with the law. And then there is an issue of Sports Law that I do not do, that there is a statute of limitations three years after the facts. I have advocated that the statutes of limitations for this type of crime be many more years. But what is also clear is that Barcelona did not pay referees as the story seems to build.

“And you are going to tell me that we are the ones who are in person and the ones who said that this conduct should be condemned with a sporting sanction. But another thing is the criminal sphere. And to say that referees were bought and that if they didn’t give Vinicius a penalty in Pamplona it was Negreira’s fault, as if I’m not mistaken, said Florentino in a members’ assembly… With that I am absolutely against it, because it is not like that. The facts have to be judged, they are being judged and the justice system in the criminal field is going to decide what there is, whether there is a criminal figure or not.”

El presidente de LaLiga, Javier Tebas (i) y su director general corporativo,Javier Gómez, durante la presentación de los nuevos límites de coste de las plantillas del fútbol profesional español tras el cierre del mercado de verano. (EFE/ Daniel Gonzalez)

All parties still awaiting outcome

It has been over two years since the Negreira case was taken on by the Prosecutor’s Office, but until now, there is still no resolution. Barcelona, Real Madrid, Tebas and everyone else with a vested interest remain waiting.

Olympic men's curling standings: Updated results, schedule for 2026 Winter Games

Olympic men's curling standings: Updated results, schedule for 2026 Winter Games originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Curling has become one of the most highly anticipated events of the Winter Games. While mixed doubles curling begins ahead of even the 2026 opening ceremony, the men's competition doesn't begin until after the mixed doubles have wrapped up.

The men's curling draws begin on Wednesday, February 11 and will run until the gold medal game on Saturday, February 21. Sweden entered the Olympics as the reigning gold medal-winning champions. They dominated the 2022 competition in Beijing, and went 9-2 over 11 games to earn the gold medal. Sweden won a close gold medal game with a narrow 5-4 victory over Great Britain. Canada beat the United States 8-5 in the bronze medal game. 

Here is an updated look at the standings, results and schedule for men's curling at the 2026 Winter Games. 

MORE: Full day-by-day 2026 Olympic schedule

Men's Olympic curling standings 2026

Here is an updated look at the men's curling standings at the 2026 Winter Games. 

CountryMatches PlayedWinsLosses
Great Britain*10100
Canada*1082
Switzerland*1055
Norway*1055
United States944
Germany945
Italy945
Czechia936
Sweden927
China927

* = advanced to playoffs

Men's Olympic curling schedule and results

Here is the men's Olympic curling schedule, which will be updated with results. 

Wednesday, Feb. 11

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
FINALMen's Round-Robin: USA 8, Czechia 7Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Canada 7, Germany 6Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Great Britain 9, China 4Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Italy 7, Sweden 6Peacock

Thursday, Feb. 12

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Switzerland 8, USA 3Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Great Britain 6, Sweden 3Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Germany 5, Norway 3Peacock

Friday, Feb. 13

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Canada 6, USA 3USA, Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Norway 8, China 6Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Italy 9, Great Britain 7Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Switzerland 7, Czechia 3Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Canada 8, Sweden 6Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Norway 7, Czechia 4Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Germany 6, Italy 5Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Switzerland 9, China 7Peacock

Saturday, Feb. 14

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
FINALMen's Round-Robin: USA 8, . Germany 6Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Great Britain 7, Czechia 4Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Sweden 6, China 4Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Switzerland 9, Canada 5Peacock

Sunday, Feb. 15

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
FINALMen's Round-Robin: USA 8, Sweden 5Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Great Britain 9, Germany 4Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Norway 10, Italy 7Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: USA 10, Norway 8Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Canada 6, China 3Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Switzerland 6,  Great Britain 5Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Italy 10, Czechia 5Peacock

Monday, Feb. 16

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Canada 8, Czechia 2Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Norway 7, Great Britain 6Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: China 11, Italy 4Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Germany 7, Sweden 3Peacock

Tuesday, Feb. 17

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
FINALMen's Round-Robin: China 8, USA 5Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Czechia 9, Germany 7Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Switzerland 9, Sweden 4Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Italy 8. USA 5Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Canada 9, Great Britain 5Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Switzerland 8, Germany 4Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin Sweden 7, Norway 4Peacock

Wednesday, Feb. 18

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Great Britain 9, USA 2Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Czechia 10, China 5Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Canada 8, Italy 3Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Switzerland 10, Norway 4Peacock

Thursday, Feb. 19

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Germany 6, China 4Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Switzerland 9,  Italy 5Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Norway 8, Canada 6Peacock
FINALMen's Round-Robin: Czechia 10, Sweden 4Peacock
FINALMen's Semifinal 1: Great Britain 8, Switzerland 5Peacock
FINALMen's Semifinal 2: Canada 5, Norway 4Peacock

Friday, Feb. 20

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
1:05 p.m.Men's Bronze Medal Game: Switzerland vs. NorwayPeacock

Saturday, Feb. 21

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
1:05 p.m.Men's Gold Medal Game: Canada vs. Great BritainCNBC, Peacock

How does Olympic curling work?

Every team will play each other in a round-robin tournament that runs from February 11 to the final draw on February 19. The top four teams after the round-robin tournament will advance to the semifinals. If there are any tiebreakers, they are determined first by head-to-head results among the tied teams.

This should resolve issues, but if not, the tiebreaker will go to a Draw Shot Challenge. The team with the lowest total DSC distance (best average distance of their pre-gram draw shots) wins the tiebreaker. 

MORE: Latest news on Lindsey Vonn after Olympic-tune up crash

How to watch 2026 Olympics curling

  • TV channels: USA Network, CNBC
  • Live streams:Peacock

The 2026 Winter Olympics will be broadcast over the air mostly on the USA Network. 

Peacock will carry every event of the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics live. The NBC-owned streaming service's sports programming features live coverage of NFL Sunday Night Football, the NBA, the Olympic and Paralympic Games, Premier League soccer, Big Ten football and basketball, Notre Dame football, Big East and Big 12 basketball, PGA Tour golf, and more.

Jason Knapp and Jim Kozimor will handle play-by-play, while Sloane Martin is on the call. Kevin Martin, Tyler George, and Jaime Sinclair will serve as analysts. Kira K. Dixon will act as the curling reporter.

One Giants' cornerstone is quietly projected for an All-Star level 4.6 WAR

San Francisco Giants
Jul 14, 2023; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; San Francisco Giants hat and glove on the bench against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the first inning at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

One Giants' cornerstone is quietly projected for an All-Star level 4.6 WAR originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The San Francisco Giants come into the new season with a ton of hype. They will be led by Tony Vitello, who has taken over the managerial duties from Bob Melvin. 

Outside of that, they also made some smart moves over the winter. They acquired Harrison Bader on a two-year deal, and he should be a major help to SF in the outfield. 

They also struck a deal with Luis Arraez. His bat-to-ball skills could be just what the Giants needed after struggling to consistently push runs across the board. 

MORE: The Giants' success hinges on an offense finally outperforming its projections

One Giants' cornerstone is quietly projected for an All-Star level 4.6 WAR

With the new faces, you cannot forget about the returning core. Rafael Devers could have a monster year this year, and the same goes for Matt Chapman. 

However, San Francisco's backstop, Patrick Bailey, could be the one to keep an eye on. He is projected to have a 4.6-WAR season, according to MLB.com

"Despite posting a .602 OPS last season, Bailey was still worth 3.2 WAR in 135 games thanks to his elite defense behind the dish. In 2024, Bailey racked up a 4.3 WAR despite his .637 OPS, so it's not out of the question for a bounceback to a 4-ish-win season. Bailey will have plenty of company competing for the WAR lead, with Logan Webb leading the Giants last season in that metric and Matt Chapman doing so in 2024."

Bailey's defense wizardry has saved him, and if he can put together some better numbers at the plate, he could be the one to lead this club in WAR. However, with how Logan Webb looked last season, that could be tough. 

Bailey has been working on some minor adjustments offensively over the offseason, according to NBS Sports' Alex Pavlovic. So, don't be surprised if he looks like an improved hitter at the plate and the same elite catcher behind the dish this upcoming season.

More MLB news:

Suns owner Matt Ishbia calls out NBA's tanking crisis

Suns owner Matt Ishbia calls out NBA's tanking crisis originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Phoenix Suns owner Matt Ishbia had a strong response to the NBA's tanking crisis.

Ishbia called out other teams in an X post, referring to tanking as "losing behavior."

"Tanking is losing behavior done by losers," Ishbia said. "Purposely losing is something nobody should want to be associated with. Embarrassing for the league and for the organizations. And the talk about this as a “strategy” is ridiculous."

More:NBA executive reveals harsh truth on LeBron James' future with Lakers

Ishbia, who's owned the Suns since 2023, has had the franchise in "win now" mode since arriving in Phoenix. The Suns traded for Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal shortly after he bought the team, which backfired.

He hasn't been afraid to speak his mind. Ishbia often fires back at the media if he disagrees with something. He recently called out Bill Simmons for incorrectly predicting the Suns' win total this season.

Ishbia continued, stating teams shouldn't shut down their players if they're healthy.

"If you are a bad team, you get a good pick. That makes sense," Ishbia said. "But purposely shutting down players and purposely losing games is a disgrace and impacts the integrity of whole league."

He later pointed his comments at NBA Commissioner Adam Silver, pleading for him to address the prevalence of tanking.

"Awful behavior that Adam Silver and the NBA will need to stop with massive changes, and I have complete confidence that with his leadership, he will fix it," Ishbia said. "Those of us in a position of influence need to speak out."

Silver has been quiet on the growing issue of tanking. But it's becoming clear that the league must address the lack of competitiveness at the bottom of the standings.

More NBA news:

76ers injury news: Nick Nurse provides latest on sidelined Joel Embiid

PHILADELPHIA -- The Philadelphia 76ers will go to battle on Thursday against the Atlanta Hawks without the services of Joel Embiid. The Sixers announced that the big fella suffered some right shin soreness while going through a workout for his right knee issue and decided to hold him out against a pesky Hawks team.

The Sixers do begin a 3-game road trip on Saturday with a back-to-back over the weekend against the New Orleans Pelicans and the Minnesota Timberwolves before finishing against the Indiana Pacers on Tuesday. Before the team boards the plane and heads to the bayou, the Sixers will work Embiid out in an effort to make a decision on what comes next for him.

"The doctors don’t want him playing tonight," said coach Nick Nurse. "I think the plan is to get him on the court tomorrow and see how he looks tomorrow and I think we just go from there. I don’t anticipate it being a long time. I’m pretty optimistic about it. Just see what they come up with and see where it ends up tomorrow."

Nurse was then asked about whether Embiid's knee problems are fixed and the reason why he's out is more so based on the fact that his shin is beginning to really bother him.

"I think so," he said. "I'm not 100% sure on that, but I think so."

It remains to be seen what Embiid's status will be in the near future. One has to wonder if the shin will be a thing that bothers the big fella long term.

This article originally appeared on Sixers Wire: 76ers injury news: Nick Nurse provides latest on sidelined Joel Embiid

ESPN reveals stunning cost to fix glaring Ravens issue

ESPN reveals stunning cost to fix glaring Ravens issue originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The Baltimore Ravens have long been after a stud receiver to pair with Lamar Jackson, and so far, that has led them to Zay Flowers.

A competent weapon, but many aren't sure if he's a true No.1 or if he'll ever be.

But with Derrick Henry still rumbling, and Flowers along with Mark Andrews, Jackson still has some nice weapons, but there's no difference-maker in the passing game.

Hence, why this offseason, some think the Ravens could go on the lookout for a weapon for Lamar.

One name that has popped up is Philadelphia Eagles star A.J. Brown.

And ESPN's Ben Solak, in his proposal, the Ravens send a 2027 second and fourth-round pick in exchange for Brown.

"One of the clear lessons of the Ravens' 2025 season was that their current group of pass catchers is insufficient," Solak wrote. "While they might not need to make a move this drastic, they would benefit from having a receiver with size and contested-catch ability -- something quarterback Lamar Jackson has never enjoyed in his seven seasons."

More:Bills' Joe Brady handed huge 2026 vote of confidence

Would Brown work in Baltimore?

One thing we know about Brown is that he needs targets and catches. In fact, a lot of them.

With the Ravens having Henry in the backfield, many expect the offense to be run-heavy again, but the thing in Brown's favor is that aside from Flowers, there aren't others who will take targets away from him all too often.

Baltimore's situation is similar to Philadelphia's. A star back and another star receiver for Brown to compete with. But at least this time, he will be the No. 1 for the Ravens, and Flowers as a secondary weapon.

And if all it takes is two 2027 draft picks to get a trade done, I think Baltimore does it in a heartbeat.

More NFL news:

Chicago Bears take key step in proposed Indiana stadium move

One of the NFL's founding teams in 1920, the Chicago Bears announced the team would leave its long-standing home at Soldier Field (Justin Casterline)

The Chicago Bears on Thursday hailed the "most meaningful step" yet toward building a new stadium in Indiana, as the neighboring state passed a key measure to entice the NFL franchise to make a divisive cross-border move.

One of the NFL's founding teams in 1920, the Bears in September formally announced the team would leave its long-standing home at Soldier Field in Chicago, Illinois.

But plans to remain in Illinois with a new, modern indoor arena in a Chicago suburb have seemingly collapsed, amid a row over the state's failure to commit to providing vital infrastructure.

Bears president and chief executive Kevin Warren warned in December that Indiana had become a serious option, and on Thursday the state unanimously passed a bill allowing it to issue bonds for the financing and construction of a new stadium.

The bill's passage marks "the most meaningful step forward in our stadium planning efforts to date," said the Bears, in a statement to AFP.

"We are committed to finishing the remaining site-specific necessary due diligence to support our vision to build a world-class stadium near the Wolf Lake area in Hammond, Indiana."

The proposals for a stadium in the northwest tip of Indiana, just 20 miles from downtown Chicago, would "deliver a premier venue for all of Chicagoland and a destination for Bears fans and visitors from across the globe," it said.

The Chicago Bears had bought a 326-acre site for development in the Illinois community of Arlington Heights in 2023.

According to Warren, the Bears had asked the state of Illinois to commit to building "essential local infrastructure" like roads, utilities, and site improvements, as well as guarantees on property tax obligations.

"Our efforts have been met with no legislative partnership," Warren wrote in an open letter, in December.

"We have been told directly by state leadership, our project will not be a priority in 2026, despite the benefits it will bring to Illinois," he added.

The Bears may not be the only NFL club on the move.

Also in December, the Kansas City Chiefs announced they will leave Missouri to play in a new stadium being built in neighboring Kansas, after state lawmakers approved funding for the project.

amz/pb

From Oakland to Olympic gold: Alysa Liu takes figure skating crown

USA's Alysa Liu competes in the figure skating women's single free skate final during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena on Feb. 19, 2026. (WANG ZHAO/AFP via Getty Images)

As the final notes of Laufey's "The Promise" faded into a roaring ovation from the Milano crowd on Tuesday, Alysa Liu pumped her fists and flashed her now trademark prominent frenulum piercing in a smiling celebration as she finished her short program that was "on another level." But before leaving the ice to embrace her coaches, she reminded the world where her heart is, turning to the cameras to declare, "Oakland, shout out." 

Liu asserted herself as Team USA's brightest star of the 2026 Winter Games two days later, when she officially clinched an individual Olympic gold with a remarkable free skate, the first individual figure skating gold for an American woman since 2002.

The meteoric rise of her stardom this year didn't start this week, though. Before the triple-halo in her hair, the profiles on her alt style and the TikTok fancams, she was already an Olympian, once considered to be the future of American figure skating, before a shock retirement at 16.

However, none of that journey happens without Oakland, specifically the Oakland Ice Center, where Liu's training began at just 5 years old under coach Laura Lipetsky. Staffers who have been with the ice center for over a decade got an up-close look at the talent that would become the youngest gold medalist in U.S. Figure Skating Championships history. But they also got to know her off the ice, too.

"I watched her grow up from being a little kid that played with slime in the lobby with all her girlfriends out there - all the figure skaters, and stuff," Oakland Ice Center general manager Glenn Martin told SFGATE last month. "I think she just had that carefree attitude to her her whole life."

Liu's current competitive stint reflects that "carefree" perspective more than her first one. For most of her life, Liu's father, Arthur, and her coaches were in control of every minute detail of her daily routine. But during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, she got a taste of what a life that didn't revolve around skating was like when the country shut down in 2020. Liu sought a return to that after the 2022 World Figure Skating Championships, when she made the shocking decision to retire at 16 years old and did everything but skating.

Two years later, Liu came back to the sport on the condition that she would have significantly more say in how her figure skating life would operate - namely, doing so without her dad's input. Arthur told "60 Minutes" he was a little hurt by the decision, but appreciated his daughter's "very free spirit." Alysa described his response as happy overall and called him "a great father."

Another example of her "carefree" spirit: There are no nerves when she skates. In a January profile on Liu, her coach Phillip DiGuglielmo told NBC News, "I always say something is wrong with her brain. She just doesn't get nervous." Those at the Oakland Ice Center have seen that as well.

"One of her favorite sayings is she just competes to skate," Glenn said. "That's her motto. She doesn't get nerved by pressure, and I think we all support her just because she's a cool kid."

"I mean, when she comes home you wouldn't know if she came in first place or second place," added Errol Garcia, Oakland Ice Center's hockey manager.

What's less carefree is her love for the Bay Area. In an interview with Visit California, her answers clearly came from someone raised locally. An ideal road trip would be to go to Santa Cruz. She loves the San Francisco beaches, and shopping on Haight Street. Her favorite restaurants are Spices 3 and Shandong in Oakland's Chinatown. Her perfect California day would start at the Golden Gate Bridge before sunrise and end with a movie at Piedmont Theater. Liu also still skates at the Union Square rink, and even made sure her sponsorshipduties had Bay Area flair at the Yerba Buena Ice Skating and Bowling Center in San Francisco.

And the Bay Area has loved her back. In addition to the banners bearing her name and face at the Oakland Ice Center, and the visit with Oakland Mayor Barbara Lee, she got a recent shout-out from one of the area's most beloved athletes: Marshawn Lynch.

Whether it was Lynch's motivational words, or her lifelong dedication to her craft, Liu managed to pull off an incredible free skate performance on Thursday. The judges scored her at 150.20, which briefly vaulted her to first place by a huge nine points, and guaranteed that she'd become the first American woman to medal in figure skating at the Winter Games in 20 years. This time, when the Oaklander looked directly into the camera, she screamed, "That's what I'm f-king talking about." 

Liu will come back to the Bay Area with two gold medals around her neck: one from Thursday's immaculate performance, and another from the mixed-team short program. Of course, those cheering for her at home will celebrate, but it'll be for more than for what hangs around her neck. They were always going to be proud of how far this local comeback story went, one that had an Oakland spirit behind it.

"She's a Bay Area kid, going to school across the street, being here in Oakland, growing up as a teenager," Garcia said. "She's in her own world. She's herself. No one's changing that. And I think that's how she's been."

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This article originally published at From Oakland to Olympic gold: Alysa Liu takes figure skating crown.

Fantastic photos of figure skating gold medalist Alysa Liu

It was a huge day for United States women at the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics on Thursday. After the hockey team defeated Canada in overtime to earn the gold medal in that event. Alysa Liu took to the ice and put on a brilliant free skate. The result was Liu became the first woman on Team USA to earn a gold medal in women's figure skating singles since 2002. Liu was jubilant after her effort as was here team. It was a huge day for Team USA on the women's side in Italy.

It was a huge day for United States women at the Milan Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics on Thursday. After the hockey team defeated Canada in overtime to earn the gold medal in that event, Alysa Liu took to the ice and put on a brilliant free skate. The result was Liu became the first woman on Team USA to earn a gold medal in women's figure skating singles since 2002. Liu was jubilant after her effort as was here team. It was a huge day for Team USA on the women's side in Italy.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

USA's Alysa Liu competes in the figure skating women's single free skating final.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Gold medalist USA's Alysa Liu poses on the podium of the figure skating women's single free skating final.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

USA's Alysa Liu competes in the figure skating women's single free skating final.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu of Team United States reacts with her team in the Kiss and Cry zone.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Gold medalist Alysa Liu of Team United States poses for a photo during the medal ceremony.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Gold medalist Alysa Liu of Team United States poses for a photo during the medal ceremony.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Gold medalist Alysa Liu of Team United States celebrates on the podium.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu (24) of the United States competes in the women's figure skating short program.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu of the United States reacts after competing in the women's free skate.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu of the United States competes in the women's free skate.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu of the United States reacts after competing in the women's free skate.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu of the United States competes in the women's free skate.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu of the United States competes in the women's free skate.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu of the United States competes in the women's free skate.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Ami Nakai of Japan reacts with Alysa Liu of the United States after competing in the women's free skate.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu of the United States celebrates with the gold medal in the women's free skate.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu of the United States celebrates with the gold medal.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Gold medalist Alysa Liu of the United States and silver medalist Kaori Sakamoto of Japan and bronze medalist Ami Nakai of Japan celebrate.

Alysa Liu wins gold medal

Alysa Liu of United States celebrates after winning the gold medal.

This article originally appeared on The List Wire: Alysa Liu won gold for Team USA in women's figure skating

2026 Genesis Invitational Friday tee times: Round 2 groupings

Tracy Wilcox/PGA TOUR via Getty Images
Rickie Fowler is looking to continue his solid start to the season at the 2026 Genesis Invitational.Tracy Wilcox/PGA TOUR via Getty Images

The PGA Tour's 2026 Genesis Invitational continues on Friday, February 20, with the second round at Riviera Country Club. You can find full Genesis Invitational tee times for Friday's second round at the bottom of this post.

Featured tee time for Round 2

This year, Rickie Fowler is trying to re-enter the elite ranks of the PGA Tour after years of struggles on the course. And so far, the six-time Tour winner is looking good.

Fowler has made three starts in 2026, and he's finished in the top 20 in each of them. Now he's hoping to take the next step and get into contention at this week's Genesis Invitational.

He has two top-20 finishes in his career at the Genesis and finished T35 the last time it was held at Riviera in 2024.

Fowler will tee off for Round 2 at 10:27 a.m. ET on Friday alongside Tom Kim and Max Greyserman.

You can watch Friday's second round of the 2026 Genesis Invitational from 4-8 p.m. ET on Golf Channel. PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ will provide exclusive early streaming coverage beginning at 10:15 a.m. ET on Friday, in addition to featured group and featured hole coverage.

Check out the complete Round 2 tee times and groupings for the Genesis Invitational below.

2026 Genesis Invitational tee times for Friday: Round 2 (ET)

Tee No. 1

10:15 a.m. – Aldrich Potgieter, Ryan Fox, Sam Stevens
10:27 a.m. – Tom Kim, Rickie Fowler, Max Greyserman
10:39 a.m. – Lucas Glover, Tony Finau, Max McGreevy
10:51 a.m. – Garrick Higgo, Aaron Rai, Matt Fitzpatrick
11:03 a.m. – Jason Day, Alex Noren, Ryo Hisatsune
11:15 a.m. – Andrew Novak, Brian Harman, Nick Taylor
11:27 a.m. – Russell Henley, Harris English, Corey Conners
11:39 a.m. – Sepp Straka, Harry Hall, Patrick Cantlay
11:56 a.m. – Chris Gotterup, Justin Rose, Robert MacIntyre
12:08 p.m. – Scottie Scheffler, Xander Schauffele, Si Woo Kim
12:20 p.m. – Min Woo Lee, Jordan Spieth, Daniel Berger
12:32 p.m. – Brian Campbell, Wyndham Clark, Marco Penge
12:44 p.m. – Sami Valimaki, J.T. Poston, Rico Hoey
12:56 p.m. – Kurt Kitayama, Nico Echavarria, Jake Knapp
1:08 p.m. – Matt McCarty, Jhonattan Vegas, Taylor Pendrith
1:20 p.m. – Tom Hoge, Bud Cauley, Matti Schmid
1:37 p.m. – Sahith Theegala, Michael Kim, Pierceson Coody
1:49 p.m. – Ben Griffin, Keegan Bradley, Sam Burns
2:01 p.m. – Maverick McNealy, Akshay Bhatia, Jacob Bridgeman
2:13 p.m. – Cameron Young, Viktor Hovland, Shane Lowry
2:25 p.m. – J.J. Spaun, Ludvig Åberg, Hideki Matsuyama
2:37 p.m. – Collin Morikawa, Tommy Fleetwood, Rory McIlroy
2:49 p.m. – Ryan Gerard, Adam Scott, Patrick Rodgers
3:01 p.m. – Kevin Yu, Max Homa, Denny McCarthy

The post 2026 Genesis Invitational Friday tee times: Round 2 groupings appeared first on Golf.

Man Utd cruise into quarters after win over Atletico

Man Utd cruise into quarters after win over Atletico
Man Utd cruise into quarters after win over Atletico

Manchester United have reached the Women’s Champions League quarter-finals in their debut campaign after completing a comfortable 5-0 aggregate victory over Atlético Madrid.

Holding a 3-0 advantage from the first leg in Spain, Marc Skinner’s side never looked in serious danger and sealed progression with a composed 2-0 win on the night.

Atlético knew they needed a fast start to revive any slim hopes, and Synne Jensen tested Phallon Tullis-Joyce early on. But once United struck, the contest was effectively over.

Julia Zigiotti Olme opened the scoring midway through the first half, calmly finishing after good work from Lisa Naalsund. Jess Park then put the tie beyond doubt before the interval, curling a superb effort into the top corner to cap an assured display.

Despite a bench limited by injuries, United remained in control throughout, with Atlético unable to replicate the intensity required to threaten a comeback. The visitors’ frustration was summed up late on when Xenia Perez was dismissed for a second booking.

United now advance to face Bayern Munich in the last eight, joining Arsenal and Chelsea as England’s representatives in the quarter-finals.

Algeria: Riyad Mahrez sets the pace

Algeria: Riyad Mahrez sets the pace
Algeria: Riyad Mahrez sets the pace

Algeria: Mahrez takes the reins

Algeria: Riyad Mahrez sets the pace

Riyad Mahrez continues to make his mark on the Saudi Pro League. No player has yet reached the nine key passes mark in a single match this season, but the Algerian international has come close on several occasions. He delivered eight potential assists against Al-Khaleej and Al-Hilal, then seven against Al-Kholood, before adding six more versus Al-Najma.

These numbers confirm his influence on Al-Ahli’s game. In the 2025/2026 season, the winger has made 26 appearances across all competitions, tallying 6 goals and 9 assists, including 7 in the league.

On the continental stage, he has also netted 3 goals in the AFC Elite Champions League. With over 2,100 minutes played and a Saudi Super Cup already in his trophy cabinet, Mahrez remains the offensive maestro for the Jeddah club.

Jagiellonia Białystok 0-3 Fiorentina: Match report

Luca Ranieri wheels away from scoring the opener
The face of a man who keeps on doing this. | Kazimierz Koper/Getty Images

Pre-match

Adrien Siemieniec was without stars Taras Romanczuk and Afimico Palulu but otherwise sent out his strongest side. Paolo Vanoli picked a distinctly second-choice XI, making 8 changes from the group that beat Como at the weekend and Fabio Paratici explained that the club’s made a conscious choice to “divide the Conference League from Serie A” in case it wasn’t obvious that the regulars wouldn’t be risked.

The real story was the weather. It was -7°C/19°F at kickoff and the pitch was, as you’d expect, pretty well frozen solid. The atmosphere was quite warm inside the Stadion Miejski, though, as the Jagiellonia Białystok fans created an unexpectedly warm atmosphere. They filled up most of the stands, sang their hearts out, and displayed some pretty cool tifos. It was probably a blast for the 350ish Fiorentina fans who made the trip.

First half

Fiorentina started tentatively, uncertain how its own players would interact with each other and how good Jagiellonia actually was. That allowed the hosts to dominate the first 20ish minutes and nearly score a fluky goal after Fortini made a mess of a back-post clearance, hammering the ball off Kamil Jóźwiak and nearly in via a ricochet. The Viola grew into it, though, and created a couple of decent chances. Giovanni Fabbian volleyed the first directly at goalkeeper Sławomir Abramowicz and then forced a fantastic save from him just before the break. At halftime, you’d have to say that the Viola had had the better chances but that neither side actually deserved a goal, partly because the frozen surface made precision movements impossible.

Second half

Fiorentina came out with a focus on getting Jack Harrison involved down the right. It worked as he put 3 balls into the box in the first 7 minutes, including one that resulted in Ndour’s shot getting blocked out for a corner. Form that corner, the ball came back out to Fazzini on the wing and he promptly returned it to the back post, where Luca Ranieri had shaken loose of his marker and mashed a header straight into Abramowicz’s hands with so much force that the goalkeeper couldn’t keep it out. To be fair, it was probably more an error than anything but Luca’s habit of popping up with key goals in Europe makes me think there was more to it.

Jaga responded well, with Ranieri blocking a Samed Baždar effort in the 6-yard box. Fortini couldn’t find the finish on a 1-v-1 following a corner, then referee Sebastian Gishamer (who didn’t have a good game) made a baffling decision to give the hosts a free kick on the edge of the box after an offside call and Bartłomiej Wdowik drove it off the upright, with Baždar missing the rebound. It felt like the hosts were about to seize the momentum back when Fazzini got chopped down just outside the area and Rolando Mandragora fired home an absolute rocket from the free kick. Great googly moogly.

With a 2-goal lead away from home, the Viola understandably dropped everyone into their own penalty box and looked to hold out as the hosts threw everything forward, generating a couple of half chances without ever really forcing Lezzerini into action. 10 minutes from time, Fazzini went on a mazy run into the box before losing the ball. Roberto Piccoli got himself in front of Dawid Drachal, who foolishly stuck a leg out and caught the striker to concede a penalty as stupid as it was obvious. Bobby Smalls picked himself up and put away the spot kick.

By that point, the tension had exited the game. With 10 bodies in its own penalty box, Fiorentina was happy to let a deflated Jagiellonia fruitlessly probe for the final moments and then celebrate a massive triumph away from home. It was, in fact, the first time all season that the Viola had won consecutive games.

Full time

Goals: Ranieri 53’ (ass. Fazzini), Mandragora 65’, Piccoli PK 81’

Cards: Wdowik 76’; Fazzini 21’, Mandragora 41’, Lezzerini 76’

What we learned

-Cher Ndour was my man of the match. Guy was everywhere, constantly won possession, and kept his distribution really simple. His energy, physicality, and attitude make me think that he could become a good squad player with a bit more seasoning and has a ceiling for even more. He’ll remain a backup for the rest of the year but I think he’s got a lot to offer now and in the future.

-The pitch was a real issue. Players were anxious about being able to stop and start, which meant that defensive reactions in particular were muted. Basically, everyone kept the handbrake on at all times and the result wasn’t very fun to watch.

-Fazzini’s a good dribbler but his inability to connect with his teammates is a genuine problem for his development. We’ve only seen him in second-choice, experimental teams this year, making it harder for him to show any passing quality, but I don’t see a future for him if he can’t make a pass.

-Fortini’s not a fullback. I’d like to see him on the left wing at some point, particularly with Albert Guðmundsson out. His physical characteristics let him cause problems at transitions and his clumsiness and lack of focus aren’t as detrimental.

-For the second game in a row, I could see that bastard mindset. Credit to the mister. He’s forging this group into one that enjoys playing the spoiler.

What’s next

A long flight home, of course, and then maybe a day off so everyone can sit under an electric blanket and reset their body temperatures. Next up is a Monday night Tuscan Derby against Pisa. The Torri are almost certainly getting relegated so 3 points is necessary to ensure that this fixture isn’t on next year’s calendar. Fiorentina, after all, needs every point over these final 13 games of the season as it battles Lecce to avoid the final relegation spot.

This result doesn’t have any direct impact on the standings, of course. You could even argue that it’s detrimental to this campaign for survival as it’ll add more midweek fixtures to the schedule, assuming the Viola make this advantage count in the home leg. However, the positive momentum that a win here generates might mean something, especially if the players can take this attitude and carry it into Serie A as well.

NFL insider says veteran QB could be Dolphins' free agency backup plan

The Miami Dolphins are on the quarterback hunt and there are plenty of dots connecting the team to Malik Willis. The soon-to-be free agent passer spent the two seasons with the Green Bay Packers where he developed into one of the most intriguing young talents in the league at the position.

With former Packers executive Jon-Eric Sullivan and former Packers defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley now leading the way in Miami, it'd make sense if the Dolphins pursued Willis in free agency. But what if he's too expensive? With plenty of quarterback-needy teams and not a ton of options on the market, or in the 2026 NFL Draft, there's a chance the cost to acquire Willis will skyrocket.

According to NFL Network's Cameron Wolfe, there's a logical backup plan to keep an eye on.

"[Willis]'s price tag could be $20 plus million a year," Wolfe said on NFL Network's The Insiders. "The Dolphins have a precarious cap situation. Can they afford that? Another name I'm told to keep an eye on is Jimmy Garoppolo, who has a lot of experience with their offensive coordinator, [Bobby] Slowik. Maybe he's a less expensive option for them in free agency."

Garoppolo, 34, was once in a similar position as Willis. After spending his early career as Tom Brady's backup with the New England Patriots, he became a coveted option for quarterback-needy teams and was eventually traded to the San Francisco 49ers where he signed a five-year, $137.5 million extension.

Ultimately, injuries slowed Garoppolo for much of his time with San Francisco and the team began hunting for a new starter after only a few years. While he played out his entire contract with the 49ers, the team turned to Trey Lance and Brock Purdy as starters in Garoppolo's final season. During most of tenure with the 49ers, Garoppolo worked with Slowik, who was an offensive assistant in San Francisco from 2019 to 2022.

Since then, Garoppolo has spent time with the Las Vegas Raiders and Los Angeles Rams. In 12 NFL seasons, he has a 43-21 record as a starter with 96 passing touchdowns and 52 interceptions.

This article originally appeared on Dolphins Wire: NFL insider says Jimmy Garoppolo could be Dolphins' backup plan at QB

Clippers Investigation: NBA Nears Decision on Kawhi Leonard Case

Are the Los Angeles Clippers about to be hit with some serious penalties?

That seems to be the sentiment around the league, according to Sam Amick of The Athletic.

Amick noted “a significant upswing in league-wide speculation that the NBA’s hammer is likely to fall on the Clippers” now that last weekend’s All-Star Weekend in Inglewood is past.

Why Are the Clippers Facing Possible Punishment?

Largely spurred by an investigation series by “Pablo Torre Finds Out,” allegations of salary cap circumvention have dogged the Clippers since last year.

Those allegations center on superstar Kawhi Leonard and reported side deals he had with the team to allow him to be paid more than permissible under league salary cap rules.

Those side deals were allegedly asked for by Leonard’s uncle Dennis Robertson.

They were made possible, though, by Clippers owner Steve Ballmer, who is being sued for allegedly propping up the now-bankrupt sustainability company Aspiration in order to keep paying Leonard under the table. Ballmer has denied wrongdoing.

Commissioner Adam Silver said the matter remains under investigation by the Wachtell law firm.

Once that investigation is complete, presuming the allegations are found true, the league will consider punishments.

Who Could Be Punished and What Would the Punishment Be?

Obviously, Ballmer and Leonard are the likely names, though it’s hard to say what could happen given the uniqueness of the situation.

As reported by Mark Deeks of Heavy Sports, possible punishments include fines in the millions of dollars, lost draft picks and the voiding of contracts.

But this year, the Clippers have made several interesting moves regarding their roster and organization, including signing president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank to a big extension and trading away center Ivica Zubac and future Hall of Famer James Harden.

In both of those trades, the team received players and draft picks in compensation.

Were any of those decisions made to help lessen the impact of possible punishment?

For instance, was Frank rewarded for remaining loyal to Ballmer and the organization during the investigation?

Were those players traded with the knowledge that the Clippers’ newly acquired draft picks would possibly be forfeited?

It’s impossible to say until the investigation is complete and the results announced, but Amick of The Athletic said such considerations have been discussed in league circles.

“This is the sort of stuff that has been bandied about for some time now, and which will be interesting to revisit when clarity finally comes,” he wrote.

The post Clippers Investigation: NBA Nears Decision on Kawhi Leonard Case appeared first on LA Sports Report.

How Luis Enrique Used Criticism to Strengthen PSG's Bond

From Dembele's media statement in Rennes to Luis Enrique's press conferences and the goal celebrations of Desire Doue and Achraf Hakimi in Monaco, PSG's recent days have offered an unexpected sequence, between nervousness and a desire to stand united.

It's a well-known dynamic in the world of football, and a way of managing and communicating that's been dear to Luis Enrique since he became a coach. When the boat starts to rock a bit, when criticism begins to accumulate, the Spaniard likes to take aim at the media and reproach them for their lack of seriousness or vision.

A way to unite his locker room and essentially say: "It's us against them." Yet it wasn't the media who aired publicly, last Friday, the resentment of Ousmane Dembele, who went alone like a big boy to tell Ligue 1+ microphone after the defeat in Rennes: "I think we need to put more desire. We especially need to play for Paris Saint-Germain to win matches. Because if we play alone on the field, it won't work. We won't win the titles we want. Last season, we put the club Paris Saint-Germain ahead of ourselves. And I think we need to find that again."

Whether he was targeting someone in particular or everyone ultimately changes nothing in substance. He decided to do it publicly, rather than in the intimacy of the locker room, which Luis Enrique indirectly reproached him for when he said in a press conference that player statements after matches had "no value" and that he would not allow any player to place themselves above the institution.

Nor was it the media, but rather observers and supporters on social networks, who named Desire Doue as the possible player targeted by Dembele. When Luis Enrique says before Monaco: "Around PSG, there is always a lot of noise. You have to accept it. That's it," he is obviously right, but he cannot ignore that it was his reaction after Rennes, following Dembele's statement, that somehow triggered the controversy by giving the impression that he was sharply rebuking his key player and that everyone was not on the same wavelength.

Seeing Desire Doue and Achraf Hakimi celebrate their goals in Monaco with their hands over their ears or with a gesture that meant "Shut up" is not a media invention either. It was the players who reacted like that, and we don't blame them; they have the right to be vexed and not appreciate the criticism, even if it was largely justified and deserved.

Interestingly, the professional entourage of Dembele and Doue, who share the same agent, quickly denied the idea that there was an ego problem between the two. We are willing to believe it. According to RMC Sport, and this is interesting information, PSG players have recently felt "that certain observers were trying to set them against each other" following Ousmane Dembele's statements, which "did not target any particular player."

"Now, the locker room is trying to bond by becoming impervious to criticism," the radio adds. We come back to Luis Enrique. We won't go so far as to say he knew exactly what he was doing after Rennes when he responded rather sharply to Dembele's statements, but if this sequence allowed the locker room to bond around the theme of "us against the world," then the Spaniard will have aimed correctly again. A group is also built in adversity, difficulty, and the ability to respond on the field to criticism. Doue did it brilliantly on Tuesday. PSG did it brilliantly in the second half of last season as well.


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Goodwin, Bodenhorn look to continue adding to championship stockpile

LAPEL—As most have noticed by now, there has been a lot of winning going on lately throughout the Athletics Department of Lapel High School. And at a small school, there have been a great number of athletes who have been participants and contributors.

But few can say they have hoisted as many championship trophies as senior Sophie Goodwin and junior Addie Bodenhorn, who will be trying to garner another this Saturday as part of the Bulldogs' chase for a second girls basketball semi-state title in the last four years.

Goodwin, a standout founding member of the two-time sectional champion soccer team as well, and Bodenhorn, who pitched in the softball state finals and helped the volleyball team to its first ever sectional title two years ago, have a total of 23 postseason and Madison County championships between the two of them. Throw in a handful of regular-season tournament titles for both and a trip to the state cross country finals as a freshman for Goodwin and the duo has played a large part in ensuring that their school’s trophy cases are full.

Their success has been part of the school’s overall culture of athletic excellence.

“We share athletes here and we don’t have coaches telling kids that they shouldn’t play other sports or that they should focus on their sport,” Lapel girls basketball coach Zach Newby said. “When you’re willing to do that, everyone gets good athletes and you can have great success over multiple sports.”

In just her third year, Bodenhorn has already been part of a basketball and softball county title, one volleyball, two basketball and two softball sectional championships and is on her way to her third semi-state — one for softball and two for basketball — this weekend.

She said the first key to winning championships is having good teammates, something of which she has had no shortage.

“You have to have a common goal, everyone has to be on the same page,” Bodenhorn said. “If one person doesn’t want to be there, that sets off the whole vibe. Everyone has to want the same thing and once you go once, there is no feeling like it.”

She has had plenty of help, but Bodenhorn has been more than an active participant.

In addition to serving up 45 aces for the 2024 volleyball sectional championship team, she boasts a .331 career batting average for the softball team. But her greater softball impact has been in the circle. In 21 pitching appearances for Lapel, she has an ERA of 1.38 with a career 13-3 record.

She says the pressure of pitching in a state championship game is similar to making a three-point shot for team, something she did five times in last Saturday’s regional championship win.

“I feel like there is a lot of similarity there because when you’re pitching, everyone is staring at you and when you’re shooting, all eyes are on you,” she said. “When everyone is looking at you, there is a lot of pressure. If you miss, you miss, but if you make it, you’re helping your team and that’s where I correlate pitching in softball and shooting in basketball.”

While nine of her championships have come alongside Laniah Wills on the Lapel basketball court for Newby, Goodwin has been a vital factor in the success of the Lapel girls soccer team the last two years.

As one of the few Bulldogs with club soccer experience, she was pivotal in the early days of establishing the fledgling program and now has two sectional and a regional championship in the sport that she will continue collegiately at Huntington University.

She says this basketball team and this tournament run have been special.

“This four-year period of Lapel basketball has been really special for me,” Goodwin said. “The girls I’ve gotten to play with were amazing, especially this group is really fun because everyone is so close.”

Winning is said to be contagious. Newby believes that the success his players have in once sports season does carry over into the next.

His players agree.

“Once you win one, you have the determination to get back there again in any sport you play,” Goodwin said. “It’s almost like you need to have it.”

And no matter the result, whether it is another semi-state title, the first state championship for either, or none of the above, nothing can take away from so much postseason success.

“I don’t look at it as a disappointment or that we lost something,” Goodwin said. “It takes a lot to get there in the first place, so it’s an accomplishment just to go far on a postseason run, win a trophy, or anything like that.”

Hull KR beat Brisbane to win World Club Challenge

Hull KR player Tom Amone shouts in celebration after opening the scoring against Brisbane Broncos
Tom Amone got Hull KR off to a great start just seven minutes into his debut [Getty Images]

World Club Challenge

Hull KR (18) 30

Tries: Amone, Minchella, Burgess, Gildart, Hiku Goals: Mourgue 2, Martin 3

Brisbane (4) 24

Tries: Shibasaki 2 Carrigan, Mariner, Staggs Goals: Reynolds 2

Hull Kingston Rovers withstood a ferocious second-half fightback by NRL winners Brisbane Broncos to triumph in the World Club Challenge.

The reigning Super League champions, who recovered from the brink of extinction in the past 25 years to win the domestic treble, shocked the Australian side in an astonishing first half.

Mikey Lewis' kicking game forced a series of errors from the Broncos and tries from debutant Tom Amone, Elliot Minchella, Joe Burgess, Oliver Gildart and Peta Hiku opened up a 30-4 lead, with Gehamat Shibasaki conjuring the only reply.

Broncos, who came from behind three times in the NRL finals series last year to eventually take the title, then scored four tries in 16 minutes through Patrick Carrigan, Deine Mariner, Shibasaki again and Kotoni Staggs as the 24,000 fans inside the MKM Stadium looked on in growing disbelief.

In a tense finale, the exhausted Robins somehow held out to become only the sixth English club to win the competition since it became a regular feature in 1987.

The win means Hull KR now hold all four major titles, the first club to do so since St Helens in 2006-07.

The Robins, who suffered a shock defeat by promoted York City Knights when they began the defence of their Super League title last week, showed no such weakness as they stormed straight onto the attack, with Lewis testing the visitors with his kicking game.

Broncos looked rusty as they played their first game since beating Melbourne Storm in the NRL Grand Final in October, and came up with a series of errors, Amone racing onto Tyrone May's grubber kick to open the scoring.

When Reece Walsh, who combined both his mercurial brilliance with the occasional error, knocked on another Lewis bomb, Robins drove home their advantage as the excellent Jez Litten sent Minchella bursting over the line.

A Staggs knock-on gave Willie Peters' side another great attacking platform and Litten's kick sent Joe Burgess, who scored a hat-trick for Wigan Warriors against Cronulla Sharks in the 2017 World Club Challenge, in for another try.

Broncos were shocked but they suddenly burst into life with a dangerous attack down the right and quick switch through Walsh's kick, brilliantly fielded by Josiah Karabani on the touchline to put Shibasaki in.

It seemed like the first try of the second half would be vital, and so it proved as Lewis pumped up another high ball, Mariner spilled it and Jai Whitbread quickly fed Oliver GIldart, another scorer for Wigan against Cronulla nine years ago.

When Hiku raced through to touch down another excellent May kick, it seemed the contest was over with Hull KR's 26-point lead, but that reckoned without the Broncos' remarkable powers of recovery.

In the space of two minutes Carrigan supported Ben Talty's line break to score and then Mariner sprinted past Lewis to bag another.

The jubilant home fans started to settle into a tense disquiet as Walsh teed up Shibasaki for his second try and Broncos' third in five minutes, and with a few minutes left Staggs grabbed another with Adam Reynolds crucially missing the conversion.

Reynolds' three missed conversions on the night, compared to two conversions from Arthur Mourgue - before he went off with a shoulder injury - and three more from Rhyse Martin, proved to be the difference between the sides on the night.

Hull KR: Mourgue; Davies, Hiku, Gildart, Burgess; Lewis, May; Sue, Litten, Amone, Hadley, Batchelor, Minchella.

Interchanges: Luckley, Whitbread, Martin, Lawton.

Brisbane: Walsh; Karapani, Staggs, Shibasaki, Mariner; Mam, Reynolds; Jensen, Paix, Haas, Gosiewski, Riki, Carrigan.

Interchanges: Hunt, Willison, Talty, Tawha.

Referee: Liam Moore.

Van der Merwe returns from Scotland wilderness with a point to prove

Duhan van der Merwe in action for Scotland
[Getty Images]

Duhan van der Merwe is back.

A little chastened, you suspect, by his omission in the opening rounds of the Six Nations - not to mention being left out for the All Blacks Test in the autumn - and more than a little determined to make amends for lost time and for all the tries he might have scored. Against England, of course.

In putting some of the band back together - Blair Kinghorn also returning to 15 - Gregor Townsend's intentions are pretty clear.

Wales are shipping so many tries that Van der Merwe must be licking his lips in anticipation.

This game, more than any other game, looks like it's made for what he has to offer. What's that? A nose for a try like no player who has ever played for Scotland before.

A running game that would see him power through reinforced concrete if there was a five-pointer to be had on the other side. A distraction for opposition defences. A fear factor, too.

He hasn't started in a big Test match since France last March. He wasn't in the 23 for the marquee game in the autumn against the All Blacks and was only on the bench for the other box office encounter against Argentina.

The Six Nations has passed him by. This has been the toughest period of his career.

What has ailed the big man? Injury, to begin with. Then, a lack of confidence. Then, a Lions tour that saw him score more tries than anybody else while never threatening to make it into the Test squad, as he did in 2021.

After that, more injury and more shortage of belief. Rivals sped past him - Kyle Steyn and Jamie Dobie.

The malaise at Edinburgh has been a problem. Not just for him but for Darcy Graham, too.

Being a classy wing for risk-averse Edinburgh is like being a Ferrari on the M8 in rush hour. Fat lot of good your engine is going to do you when you don't have open road.

Try-scoring stats that border on the 'obscene'

You would never say he was a forgotten man, but his return to the team to face Wales on Saturday was a minor surprise. It makes perfect sense, but not many expected it.

For Scotland, a fresh, focused and eager to please Van der Merwe is surely a good thing. For Wales, probably not so much.

He's Scotland's record try-scorer with 35 in 52 games; a 6ft 5in curiosity.

In the unforgiving terrain of Test rugby he has scored 0.67 tries per international which, frankly, is bordering on the obscene.

He has scored seven Six Nations tries against England, more than anybody else until Huw Jones overtook him last weekend.

He scores at a faster rate in Test rugby than he does in club rugby, which goes back, in part, to the way Edinburgh play and, in other part, to the way Scotland play.

Finn Russell, and his ability to manipulate defences before putting ball in Van der Merwe's hands, has been the making of the wing. Offloads and cross-kicks, Russell has laid them on a plate for him. Van der Merwe is a different beast when Russell is calling the shots.

He has appeared on two Lions tours; he was second leading try-scorer in South Africa in 2021 and leading try-scorer in Australia in 2025. He got hat-tricks on both tours.

'Cardiff has seen best and worst of Van der Merwe'

Richard Cockerill, the coach who brought him to Edinburgh in the first place, has called him a freak, which he is.

Nobody could legitimately claim that Van der Merwe, for all his power and pace and lethal finishing ability, is the complete rugby player. Absolutely, he is not.

He may have come a long way since fetching-up at Edinburgh and failing his medical.

He has progressed thrillingly beyond the point where Cockerill used to close his eyes when the ball was in the air anywhere near him for fear that he'd drop it.

He's flawed, of course. But the upside? Historic amounts of it. Tries by the bucket load - easy run-ins and monstrous solo runs.

Give him a yard of grass and, as an opposition, best start saying your prayers.

His appearances at the Principality have seen the worst and the best of him.

In 2022, in what was a dismal Scotland defeat, the abiding image of him was a negative one, a man coughing up ball and looking a bit weak amid a battle.

Two years later, he was a total menace.

Russell the creator, Van der Merwe the finisher, from inside the Wales 22 for the first and from a mile out for the second, an arcing run that Wales saw coming but could do nothing to stop.

They'll see him again on Saturday. Some of those Welsh players might see him in their nightmares before Saturday.

Van der Merwe might see this is a second chapter in his Scotland's story, one that some felt might have been slipping away from him amid the excellence of Steyn and Dobie.

Rugby's brutality, and Dobie's injury, has opened the door to him again and he's not the type to knock politely. His way has always been to take the thing off its hinges. Wales won't need any warning about the danger lurking out there on the left wing.

Related internet links

Benfica report Real Madrid star to UEFA over “punch” incident

Benfica report Real Madrid star to UEFA over “punch” incident
Benfica report Real Madrid star to UEFA over “punch” incident

The fallout from Tuesday’s Champions League clash between Benfica and Real Madrid has continued in the last 48 hours. An investigation has already been launched into alleged racist abuse from Gianluca Prestianni towards Vinicius Junior, and now, another case looks set to be opened.

During the 83rd minute of the match at the Estadio da Luz, Fede Valverde and Samuel Dahl were involved in an incident that saw the Benfica defender fall to the ground. According to former referee Eduardo Iturralde Gonzalez (via Diario AS), the Uruguayan should have been sent off for throwing a punch.

“That’s a red card. He throws a punch without any sense… it should have been Valverde’s sending off, even if he didn’t make an impact.”

Benfica also believe that Valverde should have been dismissed, which is why they have referred the matter to UEFA, as per Diario AS. The European football governing body will now open a case into this to determine whether the Real Madrid midfielder will receive a retrospective ban.

Image via Marca

If it is deemed that Valverde showed violent conduct towards Dahl, he would receive a suspension. It is unclear exactly which punishment he could be exposed to, but the likelihood would be that he’d miss next week’s second leg at the Bernabeu in the event that UEFA side with Benfica.

Valverde unlikely to be banned

However, the report notes that Benfica’s report is unlikely to come to much. UEFA would need to discredit the criteria of the referee and the VAR if they were to pass down punishment to Valverde, which has not happened all too often in the past.

In the coming days, it will be known how UEFA rule on the Valverde, as well as the one with Vinicius and Prestianni. Real Madrid will be anticipating the verdict in both.

UECL | Jagiellonia 0-3 Fiorentina: Viola on fire with big play-off victory

UECL | Jagiellonia 0-3 Fiorentina: Viola on fire with big play-off victory
UECL | Jagiellonia 0-3 Fiorentina: Viola on fire with big play-off victory

Fiorentina have one foot in the Conference League last 16 after their 3-0 play-off victory away to Jagiellonia, with Luca Ranieri, Rolando Mandragora and Roberto Piccoli goals.

The Viola made the trip to Bialystok without injured David De Gea, Moise Kean, Dodo, Manor Solomon and Albert Gudmundsson, while Marco Brescianini, Oliver Christensen and Daniele Rugani are cup-tied. Luca Lezzerini therefore made his second UEFA appearance, after a 3-2 defeat to PAOK in November 2016. Jagiellonia were missing suspended top scorer Afimico Pululu and midfielder Taras Romanczuk, who will return for the second leg on February 26.

See how it all unfolded on the Liveblog.

COMO, ITALY – FEBRUARY 14: ACF Fiorentina coach Paolo Vanoli reacts during the Serie A match between Como 1907 and ACF Fiorentina at Giuseppe Sinigaglia Stadium on February 14, 2026 in Como, Italy. (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

Nicolò Fortini risked an own goal getting into a terrible tangle dealing with the taught and low Jesus Imaz cross from the right.

Giovanni Fabbian’s cushioned volley with the inside of the boot on a Rolando Mandragora cross was well smothered by the local goalkeeper.

Fiorentina had a big chance on the stroke of half-time, as Fabbian controlled a cross from the left and hit the half-volley from 12 yards, forcing a tricky save at the base of the near post.

Cher Ndour also had two good efforts charged down, then on the resulting corner Jacopo Fazzini stood up a cross to the back post for Luca Ranieri’s header, bending back the goalkeeper’s gloves from a tight angle to give Fiorentina the lead.

SEVILLE, SPAIN – MAY 01: Luca Ranieri of Fiorentina celebrates scoring his team’s first goal during the UEFA Conference League 2024/25 Semi Final First Leg match between Real Betis Balompie and ACF Fiorentina at Estadio Benito Villamarin on May 01, 2025 in Seville, Spain. (Photo by Denis Doyle/Getty Images)

Samed Bazdar nodded wide from a corner at the other end, but it was nearly 2-0 when the referee played the advantage after a foul and Fazzini dribbled into the area, but fired straight at the on-rushing goalkeeper.

Jagiellonia had the ball in the net when it was rolled across from the right, but Bartlomiej Wdowik was offside when sweeping in from close range.

Moments later, a Wdowik free kick bent around the wall and bounced off the base of the far post, beyond Lezzerini’s fingertips.

FLORENCE, ITALY – JANUARY 27: Roberto Piccoli of ACF Fiorentina celebrates after scoring a goal during of the Coppa Italia match between of ACF Fiorentina and of Como 1907 at Stadio Artemio Franchi on January 27, 2026 in Florence, Italy. (Photo by Gabriele Maltinti/Getty Images)

Instead, Fiorentina doubled their lead with a sensational Mandragora free kick into the top corner from just outside the box, laser-focused with the midfielder’s left foot.

Fazzini was cut off after a slalom past two defenders, but Piccoli was felled by Dawid Drachal on the rebound for a penalty. Piccoli converted it himself to give the Viola a 3-0 lead in Poland.

Jagiellonia 0-3 Fiorentina

Ranieri 53 (F), Mandragora 66 (F), Piccoli pen 81 (F)

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US clinch ice hockey gold with overtime winner

Megan Keller scored in overtime to clinch Winter Olympic gold for the United States in a dramatic 2-1 win over great rivals Canada.

It marks a third Olympic title for the US women's team and their first since the 2018 Games in Pyeongchang.

Kristin O'Neill had given the Canadians the lead in the second period at Milan's Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena, ending the US's 352-minute streak without conceding a goal since their opening win over the Czech Republic.

With little more than two minutes left on the clock, US captain Hilary Knight scored her 15th career Olympic goal on her final appearance to force a sudden-death overtime - the third time the women's Olympic final has required it in four Games.

Four minutes in to the three-on-three period, Keller skilfully drew her opponent out of position before firing past Canadian goaltender Ann-Renee Desbiens, sparking wild celebrations as her team-mates poured on to the ice.

"I'm lost for words. This is an incredible feeling. I love these girls so much," Keller said.

"This group deserves it. Just the effort and the faith that we kept through this four-year journey is something very special."

Barring the 2006 Games in Turin, when Canada defeated Sweden, the two north American nations have contested every Olympic final since women's ice hockey was added to the programme in 1998.

Canada are five-time champions but had suffered a chastening 5-0 defeat by the Americans in the group stages, their worst defeat at an Olympics in 28 years.

The US, meanwhile, have been in imperious form from the start, with O'Neill's goal only the second they had conceded all Games.

Earlier on Thursday, Switzerland beat Sweden 2-1 to win the bronze medal.

The men's ice hockey final will be contested on Sunday, with Canada facing Finland and the US taking on Slovakia in Friday's semi-finals.

How Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza stacks up vs. recent top-5 draft picks

Fernando Mendoza has no peers in the 2026 NFL draft class.

There will be no breathless debate about the top quarterback available in 2026, no Ryan Leaf-style uncertainty to Mendoza’s march to No. 1.

Mendoza is expected to become a Raider, and after that, NFL Network draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah isn’t sure another quarterback should come off the board in the first round. Alabama’s Ty Simpson, the No. 2 quarterback in the class, is graded somewhere early in the second-round range by Jeremiah.

To find a comp for Mendoza, Jeremiah had to compare the Indiana star to the quarterbacks of the last three draft classes.

For example, Jeremiah would have taken Mendoza at No. 1 in 2023, ahead of Bryce Young, C.J. Stroud and Anthony Richardson, the quarterbacks taken by the Panthers, Texans and Colts in the top five.  

"I would have him, just off the college grade, a tick above those guys," Jeremiah said.

Mendoza might have had to wait in 2024.

If he was a prospect in that quarterback-heavy class, the NFL Network analyst would have ranked the Indiana player fourth.

“The group we had a couple of years ago, those top three guys, for me it was Caleb (Williams) one, it was (Drake) Maye two, Jayden Daniels three, he would slot in behind those guys,” Jeremiah said. “But I think he’s excellent, I think he’s ready to go.”

If he’d come out a year ago, Jeremiah thinks the Titans would have been facing a difficult decision.

“I gave him the same grade that I gave Cam Ward,” Jeremiah said.

Jeremiah was referring to the overall grade he gives every draft prospect, rather than comparing Mendoza to Ward.

The two quarterbacks reached that level in very different ways.

“You could not be any more polar opposite as players,” Jeremiah said. “With Cam Ward, it was kind of the magic, the off-schedule magic that he had, to go along with just a loose, fluid, motion. … Whereas Mendoza is a little more robotic in his movement than Cam, but still has a strong arm. I think he does a really good job of protecting the football. Both of them excelled in the RPO game.”

Mendoza’s draft stock, like his Heisman Trophy candidacy, built over the course of Indiana’s undefeated run to the program’s first national title.

When Mendoza arrived in Bloomington, his draft stock was seen somewhere below a handful of other quarterbacks, but as the season progressed, every other quarterback fell down the draft boards while Mendoza rose.

A lot of the quarterbacks analysts were talking about last summer ended up deciding to stay in school.

But even halfway through the season, the NFL Network analyst remembers some skepticism about Mendoza’s NFL prospects.

“Talking to people early on, it was, ‘The Indiana offense, it’s RPOs, the ball’s out, it’s back shoulders and it’s not much else,’” Jeremiah said. “Then you go through and study them and watch all the third-and-7-plus throws he makes, and tight windows, and hanging in and taking big shots, showing his toughness. You look at him in the red zone, you look at him in key moments in big games, and I don’t know how you could have too much of a concern there.”

Mendoza kept ticking off the boxes, proving himself to the NFL with each big performance.

And the bigger the game, the more Mendoza proved that he has the intangibles that are often difficult for NFL evaluators to analyze.

“The best attribute that (Mendoza) has is his toughness,” Jeremiah said. “When you get drilled early in the game as he did a couple of times, and you don’t see any rattle to him at all, he just kind of locks back in, there’s a mental and physical toughness to him that’s going to serve him well.”

Mendoza is likely going to need it.

From the sounds of it, next week’s appearance at the NFL scouting combine will be the first big step in a draft process that will be more of a coronation than an evaluation, leading Mendoza to the Raiders and first-year head coach Klint Kubiak.

Jeremiah likes the idea of pairing Kubiak and Mendoza together.

Because he believes the Indiana quarterback stacks up there with the best the NFL Draft has offered over the past couple of seasons.

This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Fernando Mendoza NFL draft: Indiana QB vs recent top-5 draft picks

Prominent NFL draft analyst names 2 possible Riq Woolen replacements for Seahawks

JACKSONVILLE, FL - NOVEMBER 2: Devin Moore #28 of the Florida Gators returns an interception during a game between University of Florida and University of Georgia at EverBank Stadium on November 2, 2024 in Jacksonville, Florida. (Photo by Perry McIntyre/ISI Photos/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Seattle Seahawks have an interesting free agency ahead as it pertains to their secondary. Cornerbacks Josh Jobe and Riq Woolen are unrestricted free agents, with Woolen not only likely to cost way more on the open market, but also more likely to leave Seattle.

For all of the criticisms Woolen has received for tackling issues, lapses in concentration, and untimely penalties, losing Woolen would also be losing an objectively good cover corner with elite physical traits in terms of his height, arm length, and speed.

Ahead of next week’s Scouting Combine in Indianapolis, Field Gulls was on hand for a media conference call with former NFL scout and longtime NFL Network draft analyst Daniel Jeremiah. As (seemingly) the only Seahawks representation in attendance, I had the opportunity to ask Daniel about potential Day 2 cornerback options to replace Riq, and he provided a couple of intriguing names from the SEC.

“Julian Neal from Arkansas, who’s 6’1 1/2 and 202 pounds,” Jeremiah said. “He’s big and long, he’s an efficient mover. He can high point and play the ball, he can run and carry vertical routes. He’s got recoverability, he’s physical—you see some big hits on tape, you know, the toughness there. Had two picks, he’s in that [pick 64] range for me.”

“Another big kid out of Florida is Devin Moore,”Jeremiah added. “I don’t have the officials on him, so we’ll see at the combine, but the numbers I got from scouts was right around 6’3 and just under 200 pounds. Plays that kind of high, side shuffle technique. He’s comfortable in press [coverage]. He can play through the wide receiver to the ball. He’s a good blitzer—you can watch him against Texas, drills Arch Manning in that one, and then has another impressive play in that game where he wheels and finds the ball for a pick.

“So he kind of gave you the line of scrimmage toughness as well as some ball skills down the field. But those are two big corners that are probably right in that range where they are at the bottom of Round 2.”

Neal transferred to Arkansas after four years at Fresno State, whereas Moore’s entire collegiate career has been with the Gators. If there’s any major concern regarding Moore it’s his health, including a pair of season-ending shoulder injuries. Last season was his first time playing double-digit regular season games, but when healthy he was a very impactful player on an otherwise bad football team. Neal similarly shined on a sub-.500 Arkansas squad, but he doesn’t have the same injury concerns as Moore and is not as fast.

Of course, we don’t have combine measures yet to get an even better idea of where certain players will raise and fall in the draft, but this is a good starting point to know which Seahawks prospects to keep an eye on moving forward.

Manchester United into UWCL Quarters vs. Bayern Munich

LEIGH, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 19: Julia Zigiotti Olme of Manchester United (L) celebrates scoring her team's first goal with teammate Jess Park during the UEFA Women's Champions League 2025/26 KO play-offs Second Leg match between Manchester United Women and Club Atletico de Madrid at Leigh Sports Village on February 19, 2026 in Leigh, England. (Photo by Carl Recine/Getty Images) | Getty Images

A season of first for Manchester United will continue after an emphatic victory in the UEFA Women’s Champions League Playoff round. The Reds got past Atletico Madrid thanks to a 3-0 first leg victory and a comfortable return leg at Leigh Sports Village on Thursday, winning 2-0 in front of their home support.

Julia Zigiotti Olme opened the scoring with a tidy finish from the top of the box, set up by Lisa Naalsund to fire low and all but wrap up the tie in the first half. If there was any doubt lingering, it vanished soon after when Jess Park fired in a beauty. She found the ball in space outside the box, taking time to place a powerful strike into the top right corner of the goal for 2-0 on the night and 5-0 on aggregate.

Atletico grew frustrated as the match wore on, and the frustration boiled over with a red card tackle in the 85th minute by Xenia Perez.

United will face Bayern Munich in the next round of the competition, with the first leg taking place the week of March 23.

The current Frauen Bundesliga leaders began their UWCL campaign with a hefty 7-1 loss to Barcelona in September, but rebounded with wins against Juventus, Arsenal, Paris Saint-Germain, and Valerenga to book their place in the last eight.

Bengals tabbed as the best fit for 2 big-time NFL free agents from the Chiefs

Football: Cincinnati Bengals Ja'Marr Chase (1) in action, is tackled vs Kansas City Chiefs Bryan Cook (6) at Arrowhead Stadium. Kansas City, MO 9/15/2024 CREDIT: Erick W. Rasco (Photo by Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images) (Set Number: X164620 TK1))

The Cincinnati Bengals need a boost on defense, so it might make sense to pick up familiar faces.

ESPN’s Matt Bowen chose the best fits for the top 50 free agents, and he thinks the Bengals would be wise to add two defensive players from the Kansas City Chiefs.

Here is why he thinks safety Bryan Cook should land in Cincinnati:

With Geno Stone heading to free agency, the Bengals could look to Cook, a versatile safety for the Chiefs in 2025 who can play from depth or spin down to the front. The top-rated free agent at his position, I see Cook as an upgrade for a Bengals defense that allowed 233.8 passing yards per game last season (26th).

And here is what Bowen wrote about Chenal fitting in with the Bengals:

With his ability to pressure and walk up into the front, Chenal would give defensive coordinator Al Golden more flexibility within his game plans. In four seasons with the Chiefs, Chenal recorded 193 total tackles, seven sacks and 28 pressures.

Perhaps more importantly, the Bengals have seen how productive those two have been in big games up close. So these are actually very reasonable solutions to Cincinnati’s defensive woes.

The interesting thing about Cook is that signing him would take away the Bengals’ need to take Ohio State safety Caleb Downs if they want to upgrade the safety position. Conversely, losing Cook would make it likelier that the Chiefs use the ninth overall selection on Downs, one spot before the Bengals go on the clock.

That makes Cook a very intriguing free agent for the Bengals to watch for.

Chicago Bears Move One Step Closer to Northwest Indiana

The Chicago Bears’ long-running stadium search moved closer to becoming reality in Northwest Indiana on Thursday, as state officials signaled Hammond as the preferred site and lawmakers advanced legislation designed to support construction of a new NFL stadium.

The shift comes as excitement around the franchise has surged following a strong season that included a playoff run and a postseason victory over division rival Green Bay, renewing fan energy across Chicagoland and Northwest Indiana as stadium discussions intensify.

Indiana Gov. Mike Braun and legislative leaders have pointed to Hammond as the leading option while emphasizing that final decisions still depend on negotiations, due diligence by the Bears and passage of key state legislation.

“We are committed to finishing the remaining site-specific necessary due diligence to support our vision to build a world-class stadium near the Wolf Lake area in Hammond, Indiana,” the Bears said in a statement.

The announcement marks a turning point in months of regional competition that included a formal proposal from Gary offering multiple potential stadium sites and a financing framework city leaders said could rival options in Illinois.

Gary Mayor Eddie Melton said the state’s decision brings clarity but also disappointment after the city made what he described as a strong case.

“Today’s announcement that the State of Indiana has selected Hammond for the new Bears stadium marks a major shift for our region,” Melton said. “While Gary presented a compelling case, the State’s decision now sets the stage for a new chapter in Northwest Indiana.”

Melton said his primary concern is protecting previously committed funding, particularly innkeeper’s tax revenue designated for operations of the Lake County Convention Center in Gary.

“We must safeguard investments that support our long-term growth and stability,” he said.

He added that a stadium project in Hammond could still generate broader economic benefits across Northwest Indiana.

“Regional success benefits us all,” Melton said. “Gary is uniquely positioned to amplify this economic momentum.”

Hammond borders Gary, meaning a stadium built near Wolf Lake would sit minutes from the city. Local leaders have described the project as a potential economic boon for Northwest Indiana, with ripple effects extending beyond a single host city.

Chuck Hughes, president and CEO of the Gary Chamber of Commerce, said he was initially skeptical when rumors surfaced last year that the Bears might relocate to Gary but began to take the proposal more seriously after hearing the governor publicly support bringing the team to Indiana.

“Gary, we’re part of the region, and when good things happen for the region, it happens for all of us,” Hughes said. “Anything that happens good in the region is good for Gary.”

“There will likely be an impact on everyone in Northwest Indiana,” Hughes added.

Gary pitched sites before state opted for Hammond

Gary officials spent months pitching the Bears and state leaders on a proposal that included several potential stadium locations and new state-backed financing tools.

The city identified sites near Hard Rock Casino Northern Indiana, Buffington Harbor, and other development-ready parcels with highway, rail and airport access. Officials described them as “plug-and-play” options capable of moving quickly if selected.

The proposal gained traction after lawmakers introduced Senate Bill 27, legislation that would create a Northwest Indiana Stadium Authority to finance and manage a professional sports venue.

Ultimately, state leaders signaled Hammond as the preferred site for continued negotiations, shifting the focus to land near Wolf Lake.

State legislation outlines financing and authority

Senate Bill 27 would create the Northwest Indiana Stadium Authority, a public body with the power to issue bonds, acquire land and support stadium construction and operation.

The proposal includes new food, beverage, and innkeeper’s taxes in Northwest Indiana counties to help fund construction and infrastructure. Lawmakers have said the Bears would contribute approximately $2 billion toward construction costs as part of a broader public-private partnership.

Braun framed the measure as a way to provide a clear path forward.

“Indiana is open for business, and our pro-growth environment continues to attract major opportunities like this partnership with the Chicago Bears,” Braun said in a statement, adding that the state has identified a promising site near Wolf Lake in Hammond and is working toward a final agreement.

Indiana House Speaker Todd Huston said during a legislative hearing Thursday that state leaders have had “excellent conversations” with the Bears and are building a relationship that could form the basis of a public-private partnership to construct a world-class stadium in Northwest Indiana.

Hammond Mayor Thomas McDermott Jr. also spoke during the hearing. He said the city is ready to partner with the Bears and would do “whatever it takes” to make the project a success, calling Hammond uniquely positioned within the Chicagoland region.

NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell visited Northwest Indiana earlier this year and toured the Hammond site while in the area for the Bears-Packers playoff game.

Lawmakers must still finalize the stadium authority legislation. The Bears must complete site-specific due diligence and negotiate final financing and development terms.

The team has not announced a final stadium location.

The post Chicago Bears Move One Step Closer to Northwest Indiana appeared first on Capital B Gary.

Chicago Bears' move to Indiana isn't definite, Illinois governor says

The governor of Illinois said he was surprised by the Chicago Bears' statement Thursday morning that it has a vision to build a stadium in Hammond, Indiana — and that, in fact, team officials have since told Illinois officials that a move across state lines is not a done deal.

Bears representatives and state leaders had "mostly agreed" Wednesday on a bill to keep the NFL team in Illinois, Gov. JB Pritzker told media, with initial plans to move the legislation forward Thursday. However, the team asked for a delay to work out a couple of details, he said.

"Now they're saying to us that that statement is not some confirmation that they're moving to Indiana, but rather that Indiana had asked them to say that they were going to move forward with the negotiations in Indiana," Pritzker said.

This is what the Bears said in their Feb. 19 statement: "The passage of (Indiana) SB 27 would mark the most meaningful step forward in our stadium planning efforts to date. We are committed to finishing the remaining site-specific necessary due diligence to support our vision to build a world-class stadium near the Wolf Lake area in Hammond, Indiana. We appreciate the leadership shown by (Indiana) Governor Braun, Speaker Huston, Senator Mishler and members of the Indiana General Assembly in establishing this critical framework and path forward to deliver a premier venue for all of Chicagoland ..."

Bears spokesperson Scott Hagel said later Thursday that statement "is all we have to share at this time."

The possibility of the Bears locating their new stadium in Northwest Indiana instead of Illinois first surfaced in an earlier statement from the team, in mid-December, amid negotiations with Illinois to replace Soldier Field.

Bills have subsequently been in the works in both states to pave the way for stadium construction. Even Iowa lawmakers have made a pitch to lure the stadium there.

Gov. JB Pritzker delivers the State of the State address at the Illinois State Capitol on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026, in Springfield. The proposed $56.1 billion budget includes minimal new spending.

Pritzker said he remains firm that Illinois is "not going to build a stadium for the team."

"We want to make sure we're protecting the consumers and taxpayers in the state," he said Thursday.

Now, Pritzker said, "we're waiting to hear from the Bears what they want to do next, because they essentially stopped things in their tracks until we hear more."

Cindi Andrews is IndyStar senior news director. She can be reached at cindi.andrews@indystar.com.

This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Chicago Bears' move to Indiana isn't definite, Pritzker says

Heat sign undrafted rookie to three-year NBA deal

Miami Heat Classic edition uniform
NBA.com

Heat sign undrafted rookie to three-year NBA deal originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

While the NBA resumes the regular season this week, the Miami Heat will begin their playoff push once again in a matchup against the Atlanta Hawks on Friday.

Before that takes place, the Heat made a roster move. They signed two-way forward Myron Gardner to a three-year, $5.07 million NBA deal, Michael Scotto of HoopsHype reported.

Scotto added that Gardner's deal is fully guaranteed for the rest of the season, has a $500,000 partial guarantee for 2026-27, and is non-guaranteed for 2027-28.

Who is Miami Heat forward Myron Gardner?

Myron Gardner was an undrafted rookie in the 2023 class out of the University of Little Rock. The Orlando Magic signed the forward following the draft, and he would spend two seasons with their G League affiliate, the Osceola Magic.

Gardner would then go on to play with the Miami Heat in the 2025 Summer League. This resulted in Gardner signing a two-way contract with the team in July.

While splitting time between the G League and the NBA, Gardner has emerged as a role player that the Heat wants to keep long-term, resulting in a standard NBA contract.

The 24-year-old has seen his minutes increase since the start of the new year, and through six games in February, he is averaging 6.2 points, 5.2 rebounds, and 2.0 assists in 16.8 minutes while shooting 42.4 percent from the field and 43.8 percent from three.

He will continue to play for a Heat team that already has eight players who average over 20 minutes a game, but have faced a large list of injuries so far this season.

More Heat news:

Hodgkinson breaks women's indoor 800m world record

Keely Hodgkinson has broken the long-standing women's indoor 800m world record, set by Slovenia's Jolanda Ceplak on the day the Briton was born almost 24 years ago.

Olympic champion Hodgkinson crossed the line in one minute 54.87 seconds in Lievin, France, taking almost one second off Ceplak's time of 1:55.82 which had endured since 3 March 2002.

"Thank god. That was really fun, I was really looking forward to this," Hodgkinson told the crown, before being adorned with a golden tiara as she took her place on a throne beside the track.

The 23-year-old, who broke the rarely contested 600m record during her previous indoor season three years ago, joins triple jumper Jonathan Edwards as the only British athlete to hold a current world record in one of the sport's championship events.

Hodgkinson was primed to target the 800m record at her eponymous Keely Klassic event in February last year, before her ambitions were ruined by the first of two serious hamstring injuries that season.

Speaking before Thursday's event, Hodgkinson said that Lievin was not just about the world record "but seeing how fast we can really go", after bettering her own national record by almost one second at the UK Indoor Championships on Saturday.

Joined on the start line by Ethiopia's Olympic silver medallist Tsige Duguma and Switzerland's Audrey Werro, who Hodgkinson replaced as the fastest woman this year, Poland's Anna Gryc was tasked with setting a pace of 55.8 seconds through halfway.

Ahead of schedule after a 55.56-second first 400m, Hodgkinson strode off the front and never appeared in danger of losing touch with the green wavelights representing the record time on the inside of the track.

More to follow.

Deshaun Watson 2.0? Why a Kyler Murray trade would bankrupt the Browns future

Deshaun Watson 2.0? Why a Kyler Murray trade would bankrupt the Browns future originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The Kyler Murray trade rumors are officially swirling, but for the Cleveland Browns, this move would be nothing short of a franchise-killing disaster. Despite speculative chatter connecting the Arizona Cardinals quarterback to Northeast Ohio, the logic falls apart the moment you look at a salary cap.

During a recent segment on 92.3 The Fan, host Ken Carman threw cold water on the idea of Cleveland chasing another expensive, veteran reclamation project. "If I can get you 7 wins I don't think Kyler Murray means anything more," Carman argued. "I don't want to invest more in a position where I don't believe in it. It's easier to invest in a first-round pick compared to somebody else's former mess."

More: Browns 2026 mock draft round-up: Surprise QB and double OL strategy divide NFL insiders

Carman nailed it. The Browns are already drowning in the Deshaun Watson contract. With Watson’s deal likely getting restructured again so the team can survive 2026, GM Andrew Berry is staring down a terrifying "dead cap" iceberg in 2027 and 2028. Adding Murray’s massive contract to that pile is financial malpractice.

Also, the 2019 first overall pick has missed significant time due to injury in three of the past four seasons. His diminutive size and decreasing mobility is making Murray look closer to an over-priced version of Dillon Gabriel. 

Trading for this Cardinals QB doesn't solve the Browns' problems; it just anchors them to a second quarterback who has struggled with consistency and health. Why would Berry trade assets for a "former mess" when he could use a rookie contract (like Shedeur Sanders) to prepare for the post-Watson era?

Bringing Murray to Cleveland isn't a bold upgrade—it's a repeat of the same desperate mistake that put the Browns in this salary cap pit to begin with. Cleveland needs to roll with the signal-callers they have in 2026, and not take another gamble.

More Browns News:

Should Bengals join Minkah Fitzpatrick trade sweepstakes?

When it comes to NFL trade buzz around the Cincinnati Bengals, all the fun for fans right now is wondering about a trade for Las Vegas Raiders edge rusher Maxx Crosby. 

But a new candidate has just entered the mix: Miami Dolphins safety Minkah Fitzpatrick. 

Fitzpatrick is apparently available for trade, with Jordan Schultz reporting that the Dolphins have had talks about a deal involving him. 

For a Bengals team that needs to seriously upgrade the safety spot, it’s a pretty interesting idea. 

RELATED: 6 Bengals veterans who won’t be on Zac Taylor’s roster next year

And as the numbers at Spotrac show, it wouldn’t be all that expensive from a cap standpoint: 

Trading S Minkah Fitzpatrick

New Team Acquires
2026: $15.6M (non-gtd)#Dolphins Dead Cap
2026: $12.9M ($5.85M saved)

The 29-year-old projects toward a 3 year, $58M extension in our system. Miami acquired him along with a 5th-round pick in exchange for Jalen Ramsey, Jonnu…

— Spotrac (@spotrac) February 18, 2026

Fitzpatick ranked as the seventh overall safety on a list of 98 at PFF last year. He’s 29 years old, but he’d be an upgrade for arguably the league’s worst safety room.

For the Bengals, a deal and the contract could be cheaper than paying up for a free agent or hoping a rookie pans out on the fly. While unlike the Bengals, it’s something that should probably at least be on the team’s radar as they go about planning the offseason. 

RELATED: Bengals' key offseason dates for NFL free agency, draft and more

This article originally appeared on Bengals Wire: Should Bengals join Minkah Fitzpatrick trade sweepstakes?

Detroit Tigers drop unreal alternate jerseys for 2026 MLB season

The 2026 MLB season is nearly a month away from starting and the Detroit Tigers have already released two of the best jerseys for any American League team.

For a limited time, the Tigers are tempting their fanbase with two alternate uniforms before the season begins, one predominantly orange and the other with a black color scheme.

The 2025 MLB AL wild card team has created a lot of buzz heading into the new season. That noise has only been amplified as the team still awaits a decision on the future of star pitcher Tarik Skubel.

MORE: Most valuable franchises in MLB

The @tigers just dropped two alternate uniforms and they're incredible.

Navy jerseys will be showcased on the road, while the orange will be worn at home for select games.

Both alternates will be available in the D Shop on Friday – while purchasing them online starts Sunday. pic.twitter.com/IOb7DwJALM

— Logan Reever (@loganreever) February 19, 2026

The 29 year old won his arbitration case with the team and will be paid over $32 million this season. However, his long-term availability with the Detroit Tigers remains very much uncertain.

However, Thursday’s huge reveal of Detroit’s new jerseys will certainly spark more interest in the AL Central franchise before the season starts in March.

Both jerseys feature unique alternate logos on the sleeves. Meanwhile, the orange jerseys have a bold cursive ‘D’ to represent the Tigers history.

MORE: Tony Clark’s stunning decision leaves MLB Players Association in turmoil

Detroit Tigers second baseman Gleyber Torres practices during spring training at TigerTown.

Fans can officially begin purchasing the jerseys when they launch Friday, Feb. 20 at 10 a.m. ET through the Official MLB Shop.

Enjoy free coverage of the top news & trending stories on The Big Lead

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The post Detroit Tigers drop unreal alternate jerseys for 2026 MLB season appeared first on The Big Lead.

Cincinnati Bearcats football makes defensive staff additions, changes

Cincinnati Bearcats head football coach Scott Satterfield has rounded out his 2026 football staff with four new staff members and some updated roles for returners.

The Bearcats added Larry Murphy (cornerbacks), Mike Beaudry (assistant safeties), Petey Warrick (assistant wide receivers) and James Vollono (assistant special teams). At the same time, Robert Nunn moves to edge rushers coach and Adam Braithwaite will now coach outside linebackers.

Cincinnati Bearcats head football coach Scott Satterfield speaks to media Feb. 10 at the Sheakley Indoor Performance Facility.

“I am really pleased with the formation of our 2026 staff,” Satterfield said. “We have such an outstanding range of people on both sides of the ball with diverse experiences at the college and professional levels, and I have enjoyed seeing them bond with our players as we head into spring ball.”

Nunn, entering his fourth season with the Bearcats, served as Senior Advisor to the Head Coach last season. Braithwaite joined UC last fall as the safeties coach.

Nunn has previously worked with the Bearcats’ outside linebackers and pass rushers. He spent 19 years in the NFL, including earning a Super Bowl ring with the New York Giants, before joining the Appalachian State staff from 2020-22.

Adam Braithwaite moves from safeties to outside linebackers as part of defensive changes by the Cincinnati Bearcats.

Braithwaite’s first season saw former walk-on Antwan Peek Jr. become a semifinalist for the Jim Thorpe Award. He was previously the defensive coordinator at Samford and Tennessee Tech.

David Flores (assistant offensive line), Curtis Fitch (assistant quarterbacks/tight ends), Josh Runda (assistant linebackers) and Theo Lemon (assistant defensive line) all return in support staff roles.

Beaudry joins as an assistant safeties coach from Army, where he was a defensive analyst under new UC defensive coordinator Nate Woody for a year. Before that, he was an offensive analyst at West Florida and quarterbacks coach at Benedict College (S.C.). As a player, he led UWF to the 2017 Division II national title, then played at UConn and Idaho, followed by a year with the CFL's Edmonton Elks.

Your 2026 Cincinnati Football staff

Staff updates » https://t.co/j1kMEzDMZ1#GoBearcatspic.twitter.com/GC3RCx3PnQ

— Cincinnati Football (@GoBearcatsFB) February 19, 2026

Cornerbacks coach Murphy previously worked with new safeties coach David Rowe at Rutgers for the past year, following four seasons at Western Carolina as its corners coach. He first worked with Rowe while serving as a grad assistant at his alma mater, Valdosta State.

Warrick comes from UTSA, where he was an offensive assistant, and will serve as an assistant wide receivers coach for the Bearcats. As a player, he was a four-year letter-winner (2013-16) with six starts as a senior for Texas.

Vollono will serve as the assistant special teams coach. Part of his career highlights include Sun Belt titles in each of his two years at Troy and coaching back-to-back Lou Groza Award winners in 2019 and 2020. Since last year, he has been with the 33rd Team, an NFL Think Tank run by former general manager Mike Tannenbaum. Vollono also has experience at Georgia, Mississippi State, North Carolina, Colorado, Navy, FIU, Towson and the Edmonton Elks.

Cincinnati Bearcats head coach Scott Satterfield looks to the scoreboard in the third quarter of the AutoZone Liberty Bowl game between the Cincinnati Bearcats and Navy Midshipmen, Friday, Jan. 2, 2026, at Simmons Bank Liberty Stadium in Memphis, Tn. Midshipmen won 35-13.

2026 Cincinnati Bearcats football coaching staff

Scott Satterfield - Head CoachNate Woody - Defensive CoordinatorCortney Braswell - Co-Offensive Coordinator, ILBsNic Cardwell - Co-Offensive Coordinator, OLPete Thomas - Co-Offensive Coordinator, QBsLuke Paschall - Special Teams CoordinatorJosh Stepp - Tight EndsSean Dawkins - Running BacksVijay Stingley - Wide ReceiversWalter Stewart - Defensive LineAdam Braithwaite - Outside LinebackersDavid Rowe - SafetiesLarry Murphy - CornerbacksRobert Nunn - Edge RushersDavid Flores - Assistant Offensive LineCurtis Fitch - Assistant Quarterbacks / Tight EndsPetey Warrick - Assistant Wide ReceiversJosh Runda - Assistant LinebackersTheo Lemon - Assistant Defensive LineMike Beaudry - Assistant SafetiesJames Vollono - Assistant Special Teams

The Bearcats start spring practice in March and are slated to begin the 2026 season Sept. 5 at Nippert Stadium against Boston College.

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Scott Satterfield adds to Cincinnati Bearcats football defensive staff

Eileen Gu responds to criticism from JD Vance, others in United States

LIVIGNO, Italy – After a scare, Eileen Gu kept alive her quest for a third Olympic freestyle skiing medal in consecutive Games. She fell in her first run of the snowy women’s halfpipe qualifying on Feb. 19 before rallying to advance to the Feb. 21 finals.

But, per usual with her, that was only part of the evening’s story.

Afterward, the American-born Gu – who represents China as one of the most famous athletes in these Olympics – responded to questions about the criticism she receives in the United States.

That, recently, included Vice President JD Vance. In an interview with Fox News, Vance said, referring to Gu, he hoped someone who grew up in the U.S. would “want to compete with the United States.”

Gu didn't take offense to Vance's words, she said, and as for Vance wanting her to compete for the U.S., she replied playfully, “I’m flattered. Thanks, JD! That’s sweet.”

Continuing the theme, Gu replied in the affirmative when asked whether she feels “like a bit of a punching bag for a certain strand of American politics at the moment."

“I do,” Gu said. “So many athletes compete for a different country. ... People only have a problem with me doing it because they kind of lump China into this monolithic entity, and they just hate China. So it's not really about what they think it's about.

“And also, because I win. Like if I wasn't doing well, I think that they probably wouldn't care as much, and that's OK for me. People are entitled to their opinions.”

Asked about her safety, the 22-year-old Gu said she had been assaulted on Stanford’s University’s campus last year.

“Not by a Stanford student,” she said. “Like a person who came and physically attacked me in broad daylight. And then our dorm was robbed. ... It was pretty serious, yeah.”

Gu was correct about other athletes competing for other countries, even in the event she’d just competed in on Feb. 19. Great Britain’s Zoe Atkin, who won the halfpipe qualifying with a 91.50 score, was born in Massachusetts.

Two of the four Team USA skiers in the event qualified for the finals, with Svea Irving finishing eighth (80.75) and Kate Gray (74.75) barely making it in 12th place after waiting out a final stretch of competitors alongside her family in attendance.

Though she finished fifth in this qualifying with a clutch second-run 86.50 while facing elimination, Gu will be considered one of the favorites to win another medal, which would give her six and duplicate her historic Beijing Olympics in 2022, when she medaled in the big air, slopestyle and halfpipe events.

“It’s a challenge being the only person in this field competing in another event, let alone two,” Gu said. “Which means I'm coming off two weeks of the highest adrenaline peaks and throughs of my life, pretty much, and everybody else is fresh. … I choose to compete in three events. This is my own bet on myself, so it's not a complaint. It's more just painting a picture of the realistic struggles that I'm going through that other people might not.

“Yes, I looked uncharacteristic in my first run. I also haven't skied halfpipe in two months because I've been training slope.”

This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Eileen Gu responds to criticism from JD Vance, others in United States

Eillen Gu stuns in sheer white swimsuit in ‘hottest’ SI Swim throwback

Eileen Gu

Eillen Gu stuns in sheer white swimsuit in ‘hottest’ SI Swim throwback originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Eileen Gu’s two new silver medals give her boasting rights as the most decorated female freestyle ski Olympian ever — and the Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue took to social media to congratulate the star athlete, who appeared in the iconic magazine last year.

“Just a reminder: @eileengu is the most decorated female freestyle skier in Olympic history,” SI Swim captioned its Thursday, February 19 throwback post on Instagram. The stunning photo showed the skier in a gorgeous white one-piece with sheer paneling.

“And one of the hottest! 😍🔥🤍💛,” commented one fan.

“As well as the hottest 🔥🔥,” repeated another.

“And the SEXIEST 🔥,” added a third.

“And she’s a baddie!! ❤️‍🔥” commented a fourth.

“A flawless aesthetic 🤍,” raved a fifth.

Gu, 22, was raised in California but competes for China, her mother’s home country. She came into the 2026 Winter Games with two gold and one silver from Beijing, before taking home silver in both big air and slopestyle — making Olympic history as the most decorated female freestyle skier ever. And she still has one event left: Saturday’s women’s halfpipe.

MORE OLYMPICS: Jutta Leerdam could score $1M for this 'flashing underwear' moment after winning gold

MORE JUTTA: Gold medalist Jutta Leerdam rocks skimpy swimsuit as ‘strongest, sexiest’ Olympian

The confident athlete had a viral moment after earning her record-breaking fifth medal, when she clapped back at a reporter who asked her if she thought of her silver medals as “two golds lost.”

“AMAZING Response,” approved one fan in the SI Swim comments. “She is incredible! 😍”

READ MORE!

Alysa Liu live results, updates, highlights from 2026 Olympics women's figure skating final

Alysa Liu

Alysa Liu live results, updates, highlights from 2026 Olympics women's figure skating final originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

JUMP TO:


The figure skating individual competition at the Winter Olympics concludes on Thursday with Alysa Liu looking to earn a spot on the podium.

The 20-year-old American had a strong showing in the short program on Tuesday, ending the day in third place and in position for a potential medal. Liu is a little over two points behind the current leader, Japan's Ami Nakai, and over 2.5 points ahead of the current fourth-place figure skater.

BELLISSIMO! Alysa Liu put on a SHOW with a season's best performance. 🤌 #WinterOlympicspic.twitter.com/mx4s2gpJiB

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 18, 2026

Liu already earned gold in a team event, so a medal would mean she leaves Milan-Cortina with her first two Olympic medals. However, to get that second medal, Liu needs another strong performance in the individual free skate competition on Thursday.

WATCH: Alysa Liu's free skate performance LIVE on Peacock

Additionally, while the United States has performed well over the years in figure skating, the country hasn't won an individual women's gold medal since Sasha Cohen in 2006.

A win would complete Liu's incredible story, as she briefly retired from figure skating after the 2022 Olympics, but returned to the ice two years later. Since she came out of retirement, Liu won gold in the 2024-25 World Championships, setting herself up for her first individual Olympics golf.

The Sporting News is tracking live updates and results from Alysa Lius's attempt to medal in the women's figure skating final on Thursday. Follow along as Liu hits the ice.

MORE 2026 OLYMPICS: Live medal tracker | Viewer's guide | Day-by-day schedule

Alysa Liu figure skating results

Free skate

ScoreFinish
150.20TBD

Short program

ScoreFinish
76.593rd

LIVE:Follow Olympic figure skating results from 2026 women's finals

Alysa Liu live updates, highlights from 2026 women's figure skating final

4:43 p.m.: With two competitors left, Liu has secured at least a bronze. However, her combined score of 226.79 is a high bar to clear for gold.

4:42 p.m.: Liu earns a score of 150.20, which puts her in the lead and guarantees a medal.

4:39 p.m.: Liu was clearly happy with her performance.

"That's what I'm f---king talking about!"

Alysa Liu after her free skate performance 😂 pic.twitter.com/FzMryHZgJ2

— The Sporting News (@sportingnews) February 19, 2026

4:38 p.m.:  Liu nails every element of her routine, avoiding any big mistakes while producing a smooth four minutes.

4:32 p.m.: Liu is now up as she aims to win a medal for this event. Mone Chiba just took the lead with a score of 217. 88.

4:25 p.m.: Liu is one turn away from going, and Glenn's 214.91 is still the best score on the board.

4:05 p.m.: With just six competitors left, the United States currently has two of the top six finishers in the event.

3:40 p.m.: Liu is now about seven turns away from taking the ice for her free skate routine, and Glenn remains in the lead with a score of 214.91.

3:10 p.m.: Liu will be skating her free skate routine to "MacArthur Park Suite" by Donna Summer.

2:50 p.m.: As Liu awaits her turn, fellow American Amber Glenn takes the lead after her strong free skate performance.

2:25 p.m.: Liu was out practicing for her performance about five hours before she was set to hit the ice officially.

American Alysa Liu on the ice for one last practice a little more than five hours before she skates for a medal tonight at the Olympics. pic.twitter.com/QaV4brHEie

— Christine Brennan (@cbrennansports) February 19, 2026

2:00 p.m.: Six figure skaters have gone so far, so Liu is still a bit away from her turn. It's early, but the best combined score right now is 178.03

What time does Alysa Liu actually skate?

Since Alysa Liu enters the free skate portion of the the competition in third place, she will be the third-to-last figure skater to go on Thursday. That means she will give her performance towards the end of the day, likely around 4:30 p.m. ET, with just two skaters to go once she finishes.

Alysa Liu's free skate song and routine

Liu will take the ice to "MacArthur Park Suite" by Donna Summer during her free skate routine.

Here are the planned elements for Liu's program:

  1. Triple Flip
  2. Triple Lutz+Triple Toeloop
  3. Triple Salchow
  4. Change Foot Comb. Spin
  5. Triple Loop
  6. Fly. Camel Spin
  7. Triple Lutz+Double Axel+Double Toeloop+SEQ
  8. Triple Flip+Double Toeloop
  9. Double Axel
  10. Step Sequence
  11. Choreo Sequence
  12. Layback Spin

How to watch Olympic figure skating

  • Time: 1:00 p.m. ET
  • TV Channel: NBC
  • Live Stream: Peacock

The Winter Olympic figure skating competition can be found on NBC and Peacock in the United States. Thursday's free skate will begin on NBC at around 1:00 p.m. ET, as the free skate portion of the event will last until around 5:00 p.m. ET.

TST Today: Spring Training Starts for Dodgers & Clippers New Faces at Practice

Feb 19, 2026; Glendale, AZ, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher/designated hitter Shohei Ohtani poses for a portrait during photo day at Camelback Ranch.
Feb 19, 2026; Glendale, AZ, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher/designated hitter Shohei Ohtani poses for a portrait during photo day at Camelback Ranch.

Welcome to The Sporting Tribune Podcast Network and a new episode of The Sporting Tribune Today, our every-weekday show on sports in Southern California, Las Vegas and Hawaii. On today’s episode of The Sporting Tribune Today, Grant Mona connects two vibrant corners of the sports world — Dodgers Spring Training vibes with voices from camp, and Clippers All-Star Weekend reactions and practice insights as Kawhi Leonard leads the way.

Segment One — Dodgers Spring Training with Roberts, Friedman, Díaz & Betts

Grant opens with the latest from Dodgers Spring Training at Camelback Ranch, where Dave Roberts, Andrew Friedman, Edwin Díaz, and Mookie Betts have been setting the tone for the 2026 season. Manager Dave Roberts emphasized focus, consistency, and “looking forward” as the squad kicked off full-squad workouts, encouraging the group to ignore external expectations and lean into daily preparation. Roberts’ message included contributions from Díaz, Kyle Tucker, Miguel Rojas and others, highlighting the depth and experience assembled around Los Angeles’ championship core.

Veteran closer Edwin Díaz, newly signed to anchor the bullpen, has talked openly about choosing the Dodgers because of their winning culture and recent World Series success, and Betts has embraced his role in camp with an eye toward another postseason run. The spring atmosphere — fueled by big names like Shohei Ohtani and fans flocking to workouts — reflects high expectations for a club chasing another title.

Segment Two — Kawhi, Clippers Practice & All-Star Buzz

In the second segment, Grant turns to the hardwood as he breaks down Kawhi Leonard’s post–All-Star Weekend perspective and Clippers practice comments from Ty Lue, Isaiah Jackson, and Bennedict Mathurin. Leonard, who starred during the All-Star festivities — including a 31-point outing highlighted by his clutch play — has embraced the spotlight and the new format, saying he’s “up for whatever grabs the attention of the consumer.” His continued elite production this season — with averages near the top of the league in scoring and impact — has made him one of the most talked-about players in a lopsided season for Clippers basketball.

Head coach Ty Lue discussed the team’s evolving identity and how leaders like Kawhi help set practice standards, while young pieces like Isaiah Jackson and Bennedict Mathurin shared enthusiasm about growth, defensive focus, and building chemistry as the Clippers chase consistency in a competitive Western Conference. The podcast can be heard every day on Apple, Google, Spotify, iHeart Radio, TuneIn and wherever you get your podcast and every weekday on the radio on KIRN 670 AM and 95.5 FMHD3 in Southern California, 98.5 The Bet in Las Vegas and the Hawaii Sports Radio Network 95.1 FM and 760 AM in Hawaii.



Keely Hodgkinson smashes 800m indoor world record with stunning run in Lievin

Great Britain's Keely Hodgkinson at the UK Athletics Indoor Championships (Martin Rickett/PA Wire)

Keely Hodgkinson smashed the women’s 800m indoor record by almost a second to extend the Olympic champion’s blazing start to the 2026 season.

Crossing the finish line in 1:54.87, Hodgkinson looked supreme en route to victory at the prestigious World Indoor Tour Gold meeting in Lievin.

Days after a stunning world-leading 800m run of 1:56.33 in the UK Indoor Championships heats, Hodgkinson bowed out of the final to instead focus on taking down Jolanda Ceplak’s mark of 1:55.82, which has stood for 24 years.

But that decision, to preserve her body for tonight’s audacious attempt, proved a smart one, with Thursday’s effort ensuring a revision of the record books and a precious addition to what is an already glittering resume.

“Thank god,” remarked an out-of-breath Hodgkinson. “That was fun. I’ve been looking forward to this for a few weeks. Merci.”

Hodgkinson came through 400m in 56.01 seconds, and hit the bell lap at 1:25.06 well ahead of the required pace, with her final 200m clocked at 29.93 seconds.

After Olympic gold and silver medals, as well as two silvers and a bronze at World Championships, Hodgkinson now has the indoor world record, completing an impressive response to what was a disappointing 2025 by her exceptionally high standards.

After being plagued by injuries, Hodgkinson was forced to settle for bronze at the Tokyo World Championships, behind training mate Georgia Hunter Bell, who clinched silver.

But without an Olympic Games or World Championships this year, the 23-year-old has targeted time goals with a sizzling run in Lievin.

After sensibly negotiating months of training with her “healthiest winter for years,” Hodgkinson insists she has “nothing holding me back” ahead of the World Indoor Championships in Poland next month.

“I've been very vocal about wanting to break it,” Hodgkinson said after her tune-up on Saturday in Birmingham. “I feel like it's my record to take because it was set on the exact day I was born — which is a fun fact.”

Britain's athlete Keely Hodgkinson speaks as she attends a press conference at the World Indoor Tour Gold in Lievin (AFP via Getty Images)
Britain's athlete Keely Hodgkinson speaks as she attends a press conference at the World Indoor Tour Gold in Lievin (AFP via Getty Images)

In a packed field, including Ethiopia’s Olympic silver medallist Tsige Duguma, Switzerland’s European U23 champion Audrey Werro and world indoor silver medallist Nigist Getachew, also of Ethiopia, Hodgkinson had the competition required to push her to new limits.

And, following Poland’s 4x400m international Anna Gryc as the pacemaker, she backed up her run last weekend by expertly clicking off the laps before storming to victory in a new world record, 0.95 seconds ahead of the previous mark.

Werro finished second in 3.51 seconds back in 1:58.38, with Duguma third in 1:58.83 and Getachew fourth with a personal best of 1:59.54.

Her next priority will be a gold medal at the World Indoor Championships next month, while a shot at the women’s 800m outdoor world record, standing at a daunting 1:53.28, is sure to follow.

Set by Czechoslovakia's Jarmila Kratochvílová in 1983, it remains the longest-standing, individual outdoor world record in athletics history, with Hodgkinson’s personal best set at 1:54.61.

Official: Real Madrid star included in UCL Team of the Week

Official: Real Madrid star included in UCL Team of the Week
Official: Real Madrid star included in UCL Team of the Week

A member of the midfield ranks at La Liga giants Real Madrid has secured for himself a place in the latest UEFA Champions League Team of the Week.

The player in question? Aurélien Tchouaméni.

Real Madrid were of course back in action on the continent on Tuesday night.

After making the trip to Lisbon for a Champions League playoff showdown with Benfica, Los Blancos ultimately emerged on the right side of a 1-0 scoreline.

Vinícius Jr. proved himself the difference-maker, netting the game’s only goal in spectacular fashion early in the 2nd-half.

It was the aforementioned Aurélien Tchouaméni, however, who saw his efforts recognised with the Man of the Match prize in Portugal.

This came following a standout showing in the middle of the park on the part of the France international.

And as alluded to above, on Thursday, Tchouaméni has again been rewarded, on this occasion courtesy of a spot in UEFA’s latest Champions League Team of the Week:

Conor Laird – GSFN

Will Howe Make Any Changes? | 4-2-3-1 Newcastle United Predicted Lineup Vs Manchester City

Will Howe Make Any Changes? | 4-2-3-1 Newcastle United Predicted Lineup Vs Manchester City
Will Howe Make Any Changes? | 4-2-3-1 Newcastle United Predicted Lineup Vs Manchester City

Newcastle United will clash heads with Manchester City at the Etihad Stadium this Saturday night as they look to earn a win on the road in the Premier League. The Magpies managed to secure a dominant 6-1 win away at Qarabag in the UEFA Champions League recently, so they would be full of confidence going into this game.

Eddie Howe will set his players up in a 4-2-3-1 formation and is expected to keep changes to a minimum for this game. Hence, Anthony Gordon will once again get the nod to lead the charge for the Tyneside club up top.

4-2-3-1 Newcastle United Predicted Lineup To Face Manchester City

Defence

Nick Pope will function in goal for the Magpies after he conceded one goal in his last appearance. Malick Thiaw will operate alongside Dan Burn at the heart of the Newcastle backline as they look to keep things solid at the back throughout the 90 minutes.

Kieran Trippier will be a nailed-on starter at right-back, while Lews Hall looks to put in a good display on the other side as the left-back. Both of them will have to pick and choose their moments to join in on the attack.

Alex Murphy will offer cover for the defensive positions on the bench.

Newcastle United

BAKU, AZERBAIJAN – FEBRUARY 18: Anthony Gordon of Newcastle United celebrates scoring his team’s third goal from the penalty spot during the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 League Knockout Play-off First Leg match between Qarabag FK and Newcastle United FC at Tofiq Bahramov Stadium on February 18, 2026 in Baku, Azerbaijan. (Photo by Aziz Karimov/Getty Images)

Midfield

Sandro Tonali and Joe Willock will play as the holding midfielders for the Magpies as they focus on winning the 50-50 battles in the middle of the park.

The gifted trio of Harvey Barnes, Nick Woltemade and Anthony Elanga will operate just ahead of them as part of Howe’s attack. All three of them need to be at the top of their game if the Tyneside club are to secure a good result this weekend.

Joelinton and Jacob Ramsey will have to be content with a place on the bench as they await their chance to make an impact in the second 45 minutes if required.

Attack

Anthony Gordon will lead the charge for the Magpies in the final third. He managed to score four times against Qarabag in midweek, which should give him a ton of confidence going into this clash.

William Osula will make up the numbers on the bench.

Weber State’s Tijane Saine Jr. Continues To Make Strides at D-I Level

Nov 8, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Weber State Wildcats guard Tijan Saine Jr. (3) drives against Utah Utes guard Terrence Brown (2) during the first half at Jon M. Huntsman Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images
Nov 8, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Weber State Wildcats guard Tijan Saine Jr. (3) drives against Utah Utes guard Terrence Brown (2) during the first half at Jon M. Huntsman Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images | Rob Gray-Imagn Images

The Big Sky has reaped plenty instant impact rewards in this new era of college basketball recruiting. In recent years they’ve reeled in some of the most game ready non-D1 transfers. Just a few that come to mind are Quinn Denker (Cal State San Marcos), Kai Johnson (Western Washington) and Cedric Coward (Williamette Univ.).

These guys and others are transferring up from Division II or even Division III and are giving their new teams instant production in the Big Sky. It’s a new part of the recruiting game. Recruits not only come from the high school or junior college ranks. They also come from professional teams overseas and the lower tiers of the NCAA and even the NAIA, all at a higher rate than we’ve seen before.

Weber State has also jumped on this trend. Bringing in 2024-2025 First Team All-Big Sky selection Blaise Threatt from nearby Colorado Mesa in the RMAC just a few seasons ago. Threatt ran out of eligibility and, in doing so, left a gaping hole in the Wildcats’ roster that needed to be addressed immediately once the offseason began.

It didn’t take long for head coach Eric Duft and company to find their guy, but there was plenty of competition from coaching staffs who also thought they hit a similar jackpot in the portal.   

The latest and greatest of those elevated stars this is season is Weber State’s Tijan Saine Jr., who made the jump to Division I after two seasons at Western Washington in the GNAC. Now, as a junior, he’s leading the Wildcats to a potential top-five finish in the Big Sky. But this success hasn’t come overnight, the former Division-II walk-on continues to put his trust in himself and the right people.

In a world where we hear about players reduced to statistics of guys who hit the portal & were never picked up, effectively ending their college careers, Saine was expecting a slow start. That wasn’t the case for the then-sophomore guard, who told the Cascadia Daily last March, “I’m getting a lot more attention than I thought I would. I’ve had 40 (NCAA Division I) schools reach out. My first four days I was in the portal, I probably had 75 calls.” 

It was a big relief, as the Everett, Washington, native was unsure if he was ready to make the jump, even after a stellar freshman year. His sophomore campaign was even more impressive, where Saine averaged 17.3 PPG, 4.0 APG, 2.8 RPG, and 1.3 SPG while shooting 46.5% from the floor overall, 39.6% from deep, and 89.8% from the free throw line. 

Saine considers two key moments from his last season at Western Washington that helped convince him he was ready to take his game to D-I. The first was a clutch buzzer-beater against a top-25-ranked Saint Martin’s University, where he sliced through the defense and let the ball go for a beautiful last-second floater.

M🏀 | We've got a @D2BuzzerBeaters special with Tijan Saine of @WWUHoops beating the buzzer to send @WWUHoops to a 77-75 win over No. 17 Saint Martin's in Carver Gym. @NCAABuzzerBters@SportsCenter@GNACSportspic.twitter.com/wUXn2jrzH0

— WWU Athletics (@WWUAthletics) January 17, 2025

Second was an away game at Western Oregon, where Saine dropped a career high 37 points.

“The winner against Saint Martin’s for sure,” Saine told Chayton Engelson of the Front. “When I had 37 against West Oregon, probably [put me] over the edge.”

Ultimately, with a supportive coaching staff led by Tony Dominguez, the confidence was being built.

“If it were my own son, and he had an opportunity to go somewhere and get $100,000 playing in that environment, and go to the NCAA Tournament, all that stuff, why would I not want that for him? So, I tell him the truth,” Dominguez told the Standard-Examiner in Ogden.

Saine chose Weber State over other finalists Chattanooga, Northern Kentucky, Texas State, UTRGV and Missouri State. With a special connection with Duft, repeatedly credited as to why he chose Ogden as his next home.

“No head coach ever sent me that much love in the recruiting process, so I knew this was serious,” Saine said to Brett Hein of the Standard-Examiner.

His impact at Weber State wasn’t immediate. Through Saine’s first 10 games, he struggled a tad, averaging 10.8 PPG, 4.2 APG, 2.6 RPG, and 2.1 turnovers a game. Those were solid numbers for a guy making the jump to a more physical and cerebral level of the sport. But maybe the easiest area of his game to critique at the time was his 3-point shooting, which stood at just 20.6% from deep.

“We’ve had a conversation with him that Kellen McCoy was Big Sky MVP, and he was really bad his first semester here. And part of it, to be quite honest with you, Tijan, he’s got to buy into how we’re going to do it,” Duft told the Standard-Examiner. “He’s a great kid, but we’re going to demand of him — he’s going to have to buy into those things that impact winning. And it’s not just scoring and assists. It’s how he defends, how he gets back in transition, how he leads, his body language. And him and I are having some confrontations with that, and he’s got to buy into it. And we’re not changing.”

The former GNAC Freshman of the Year doesn’t shy away from a challenge, especially when he has the right people standing in his corner.

“I shifted my mindset … I was a little timid in the beginning, but I’m here for a reason, right?” he said. “All of them, telling me ‘Do my thing.’ Especially coach (Jorge) Ruiz is telling me, ‘Do my thing.’ Because they believe in me, so why not believe in myself? I was just finding my stride, and I feel like I’m getting it together.”

The Wildcats’ backcourt was also one of the strengths of the roster coming into the season. With a combination of youthful potential, coupled with journeyman experience. Enter the injury bug, which essentially took a crowded backcourt and sidelined sophomore guard and fellow Washingtonian Trevor Hennig and graduate transfer Jace Whiting.

Both players would miss significant time in the coming weeks, with Hennig making his first appearance back just last week against Idaho on Feb. 12, only to miss Saturday again against Eastern Washington.

While others may have become content with the situation, down a pair of starters at a key point of the season, they’d fold. Not Saine, he’s stepped up. Averaging an increased 37.4 MPG, increasing his field goal attempts a game to 15.4, and scoring in bunches. As he’s scored at least 20 points in seven consecutive games while leading his team in scoring for the last 10 — a feat that hasn’t been duplicated since Jerrick Harding in the 2017-2018 season.

💪💪💪 @TijanSainepic.twitter.com/a1rui8ro9B

— Weber State Men’s Basketball (@WeberStateMBB) February 13, 2026

Saine is third in the league in assist-to-turnover ratio and fifth in assists. He is also second in the conference and 27th in the nation in free-throw percentage at 89.4 percent, which is currently the third best in WSU single-season history. He also leads the Big Sky in scoring in conference games at 21.8 PPG. To sum up the numbers, Coach Duft’s early involvement in Saine’s recruitment is providing a great return on investment.

As Weber State continues to battle for quality positioning in the final Big Sky standings in a few weeks. Saine appears to be developing his clutch genes at just the right time.

In a one bid league like the Big Sky, it’s not over until the rotund lady sings. Any seed can walk into Idaho Central Arena next month and punch their ticket to the Big Dance. I mean Montana State did it just a few years ago, during the 2023-2024 season. During Matt Logie’s first season in Bozeman, the Bobcats entered the tourney as the No. 5 seed and marched straight into the title game. Topping No. 3 Seed and in-state rivals Montana 85-70.

Coincidentally, Montana State are the Wildcats’ next test. Another chance to take a stab at the top-half of the conference standings and another chance for Saine to prove he’s right where he needs to be.

Larry Muniz is a Mountain West Basketball beat writer for Couch Potato Sports along with West Coast mid-major coverage at Mid-Major Madness.

US Olympian Haley Winn’s three brothers go viral for matching patriotic outfits

While many people may tune into the Winter Olympics to watch their favorite athletes or cheer on their home country, three people currently gaining attention were in the stands.

Women’s ice hockey player Haley Winn has her own cheering section consisting of her three brothers — Tommy, Ryan and Casey — who deck themselves out in the most patriotic outfits they can come up with, from bald eagle masks to mullets.

Throughout Haley’s 2026 Olympic run, her brothers have been seen wearing matching American flag tracksuits and bucket hats as Team USA earned a 5-0 preliminary win against Switzerland, during which their sister scored her first goal.

They then wore paperboy outfits as the U.S. won 5-0 against Canada, and Haley assisted with the winning goal.

During the women’s hockey quarterfinal against Italy, the trio donned mullet wigs as their sister achieved another goal assist. The bald eagle masks then made an appearance during Team USA’s 5-0 shutout against Sweden.

U.S. Olympic ice hockey player Haley Winn has had her three brothers cheering for her in the stands, wearing loud matching outfits during each game (Getty Images)
U.S. Olympic ice hockey player Haley Winn has had her three brothers cheering for her in the stands, wearing loud matching outfits during each game (Getty Images)

WOW what a game, and I don't know much about hockey. Winn Brothers, in support of their sister Haley having fun.

I am sure she is glad to have fam there and doesn't feel stealing her thunder.

No way I thought they would score right there at the end. OT coming up USA USA USA… https://t.co/QINac6kUx9pic.twitter.com/3liKKjyG28

— Mooses Felix 🇺🇸 (@MoosesFelix) February 19, 2026

Speaking to USA Today Sports, Tommy spoke about how the decision to wear over-the-top outfits first started. “So it started in 2024. We actually wore this outfit that I'm wearing now to the World Championships,” he said while pointing to a red-white-and-blue onesie with a bald eagle across the center.

“We figured biggest stage of the world, we got to go bigger and better.”

“So we pulled out a new outfit for each game that we went to and we kind of just bounced ideas off each other, saw what we liked, what we didn't like ... It was a collaborative effort,” Tommy added.

Despite the brothers working together to create their viral outfits in the stands, Haley has no say in what they wear and prefers it to be a surprise.

“We told her that we were going to be bringing some crazy outfits, so she was kind of aware. But she wanted all the outfits to be a surprise, so she didn't know exactly what was coming,” Tommy said, noting that his sister might be “a little embarrassed” by how exuberant they are.

However, Haley was quick to shut the embarrassment rumors down, telling USA Today Sports, “I'm so grateful, obviously, that they're so passionate and supportive.”

“I'm definitely glad that they're taking more of the social media heat. That's awesome. But no, I mean no embarrassment that they're supporting us.”

In terms of the gold medal match, which saw the U.S. narrowly beat out Canada in overtime with a final score of 2-1, the trio of brothers opted to wear a more low-key outfit to ensure the proper attention was being given to the sport.

“Obviously, we just love supporting Haley and the entire U.S. women's hockey team, but we want just more eyes reaching them and reaching just women's sports in general,” Tommy said.

PSG make Haaland enquiry - Friday's gossip

Paris St-Germain are showing interest in Erling Haaland, several European clubs want Bernardo Silva and Carlo Ancelotti intends to extend his stay as Brazil boss.

Paris St‑Germain have enquired about Norway striker Erling Haaland's long‑term situation at Manchester City, although the 25-year-old's most likely destination is Spain, if he chooses to move. (Teamtalk)

Aston Villa want to sign Wales midfielder Harry Wilson on a free transfer from Fulham this summer, with the 28-year-old also said to be a target for Everton. (Telegraph - subscription required)

Tottenham's 27-year-old Argentina defender Cristian Romero and England midfielder Conor Gallagher, 26, are among those who would almost certainly leave Spurs this summer if they are relegated. (Athletic - subscription required)

Barcelona and Atletico Madrid are interested in Portugal midfielder Bernardo Silva, whose Manchester City contract expires this summer, while Juventus and Monaco are also looking at the 31-year-old. (Teamtalk)

Carlo Ancelotti intends to sign a four-year contract extension as Brazil boss. (Movistar via AS - in Spanish)

France's all-time leading scorer Olivier Giroud, now 39, is at a crossroads in his future at Lille with the striker having suffered a dip in form. (L'Equipe - in French - subscription required)

Newcastle's England winger Anthony Gordon, 24, says he will not let transfer speculation affect him after being linked with Liverpool and Arsenal. (Sun)

Manchester City's English goalkeeper James Trafford, 23, is prioritising a move to Aston Villa over Newcastle United this summer. (Football Insider)

Barcelona have strengthened the release clauses for their young players after Paris St-Germain signed 18-year-old Spanish midfielder Dro Fernandez last month for just 8.2m euros (£7.1m). (RMC Sport - in French)

LA Galaxy are closely monitoring Philippe Coutinho's situation with the 33-year-old now a free agent after Vasco da Gama agreed to terminate the former Brazil midfielder's contract. (AS - in Spanish)

US beat Canada in overtime to claim dramatic women's ice hockey gold

Canada's players react following the Women's Gold Medal Ice Hockey match between USA and Canada at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games. Filippo Tomasi/LiveMedia-IPA/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
Canada's players react following the Women's Gold Medal Ice Hockey match between USA and Canada at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games. Filippo Tomasi/LiveMedia-IPA/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa

The United States prevailed 2-1 in overtime over top favourites Canada at the Milan/Cortina Winter Olympics on Thursday to claim a third women's ice hockey gold.

Record five time champions Canadians took the lead through Kristin O'Neill's short-handed goal early in the second period but the US dominated the match after conceding.

They kept threatening a leveller but struggled to find a breakthrough. The dramatic equalizer, however, came with some two minutes left to the end of the third period.

The US pulled out their goalie for an extra attacker and the move paid off when Hilary Knight was on target to force overtime.

The first team to score would take gold and this time around the US didn't need too long: less than five minutes into overtime, Megan Keller slipped the puck through Ann-Renee Desbiens to secure their first gold medal since 2018 and third overall.

Since the women's event was introduced in 1998, either the US or Canada have won gold, and they have met in seven of the eight finals.

The US took the highest place on the podium in 1998 and 2018, while the Canadians had only lost the 2018 final since winning their first gold in 2002.

Only the gold medal match at Turin 2006 had a different team involved with Sweden claiming silver.

Earlier, Switzerland took bronze from Alina Müller's 2-1 overtime winner against Sweden.

Müller also scored the goal that gave Switzerland their first bronze in 2014 as they defeated Sweden 4-3. Back then, she was 15 years old.

The Scandinavians went ahead through Mira Jungaker in the second period but Sinja Leemann hit back four minutes later to ultimately force overtime.

USA's Britta Curl-Salemme (L) and Canada's Renata Fast (R) battle for the ball during the Women's Gold Medal Ice Hockey match between USA and Canada at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games. Filippo Tomasi/LiveMedia-IPA/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
USA's Britta Curl-Salemme (L) and Canada's Renata Fast (R) battle for the ball during the Women's Gold Medal Ice Hockey match between USA and Canada at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games. Filippo Tomasi/LiveMedia-IPA/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
Canada's players react following the Women's Gold Medal Ice Hockey match between USA and Canada at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games. Filippo Tomasi/LiveMedia-IPA/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa
Canada's players react following the Women's Gold Medal Ice Hockey match between USA and Canada at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games. Filippo Tomasi/LiveMedia-IPA/ZUMA Press Wire/dpa

JGR files lawsuit against Chris Gabehart for 'brazen scheme to steal sensitive information'

Motorsport photo

At the beginning of December, it was reported that Chris Gabehart had left Joe Gibbs Racing in a surprising exit. He worked at JGR for 13 years, and won 22 Cup races as a crew chief for Denny Hamlin between 2019 and 2024. Most recently, he worked as the Director of Competition for the elite organization. 

Since his departure, there has been no word regarding why Gabehart left, or where he would end up in 2026. 

On Thursday, we learned that and much more as JGR filed a lawsuit against Gabehart, accusing him of taking part in a "brazen scheme to steal JGR’s most sensitive information and use it for the benefit of a direct competitor in NASCAR."

That direct competitor is Spire Motorsports, a Chevrolet team aligned with Hendrick Motorsports, with three full-time chartered entries. The filing notes that Gabehart met personally with Jeff Dickerson, the co-owner at Spire.

Carson Hocevar, No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet; Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota; Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Carson Hocevar, No. 77 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet; Denny Hamlin, No. 11 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota; Ty Gibbs, No. 54 Joe Gibbs Racing Toyota

Due to what the team calls the "misappropriation of JGR's Confidential Information and Trade Secrets," and learning that Gabehart was set to take the role of Chief Motorsports Officer at Spire, Gibbs opted to file the aforementioned lawsuit. According to the filing, JGR was aware of the fact that he was seeking employment at Spire, but were told that it was a position "which he would not provide Spire with services similar to the services he provided JGR."

There was also a forensic review of Gabehart's computer and phone, which JGR claims provides a timeline and execution of a plan involving the transferring of data, setups, and other sensitive information. Among his actions, the team claims he access JGR's Confidential Information and Trade Secrets, and proceeded to take at least 20 photos to avoid transferring files and leaving a 'paper trail.'

A more extensive review of the filing is set to follow on Motorsport.com, so stay tuned.

JGR lawsuit against Chris Gabehart by nickdegroot89

 

To read more Motorsport.com articles visit our website.

Keller overtime strike gives USA Olympic women's ice hockey gold

Golden moment: Megan Keller scores the winning goal to give Team USA the Olympic women's ice hockey gold medal (Alexander NEMENOV)

Megan Keller was the hero as her spectacular overtime strike earned the USA the Olympic women's ice hockey gold medal with a 2-1 win over defending champions Canada on Thursday.

It was the first time the Americans have won the women's title since the 2018 Pyeongchang Games.

Keller skilfully deked a Canadian defender and beat goaltender Ann-Renee Desbiens just over four minutes into overtime.

Her goal sparked huge celebrations on the Team USA bench and among the thousands of US fans in the Santagiulia Arena in Milan.

"I'm lost for words. This is an incredible feeling. I love these girls so much," Keller said. "This group deserves it. Just the effort and the faith that we kept through this four-year journey is something very special."

In a tight final, Canada struck first through Kristin O'Neill's backhander on a shorthanded play early in the second period, breaking the Americans' 351-minute shutout streak at these Games.

Just as the Canadians appeared to be heading to victory, Hilary Knight pulled the USA level with a shot from centre ice to send the final into overtime.

Her dramatic strike with just over two minutes left in regulation gave Knight a record of 15 goals scored at Olympics by a US woman.

Keller ensured the USA didn't need the 20-minute overtime in operation for Olympic finals as she used exquisite skill to win the game before being mobbed by her teammates as US head coach John Wroblewski wept with joy.

The Americans have now won three of the eight titles since women's ice hockey entered the Games in 1998, with Canada winning the other five.

Earlier, Switzerland won the bronze medal by defeating Sweden 2-1.

gj/bb

Megan Keller scores OT winner, USA defeats Canada to win gold in women’s hockey

United States' Megan Keller (5) scores the winning goal against Canada goalkeeper Ann-Renee Desbiens (35) during the overtime period of the women's ice hockey gold medal game at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026.
United States' Megan Keller (5) scores the winning goal against Canada goalkeeper Ann-Renee Desbiens (35) during the overtime period of the women's ice hockey gold medal game at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026. | Carolyn Kaster, Associated Press

After dominating all tournament long, Team USA beat Team Canada on Thursday to claim its third gold medal all-time in women’s hockey.

Canada led the majority of the game, thanks to a shorthanded goal off the stick of Kristin O’Neill 54 seconds into the second period. That lead stood until there was 2:04 on the clock in the third, at which point Utah resident Hilary Knight tipped a shot past Ann-Renée Desbiens to send it to overtime.

“We had a one-goal deficit against Canada — great team — you have to find the back of the net, especially against a great goaltender," Knight said in an interview broadcast on USA Network after the game. “So, we knew it was a matter of time, just leaning on them, slowly, slowly, but you can also run out of time against a great team. (We’re) fortunate that we have an amazing squad to be able to get the job done.”

Overtime was back and forth, but it was eventually decided by defenseman Megan Keller, who made a great move to get around the opposing defender and tuck the puck in.

A GOLDEN GOAL FOR GOLD! pic.twitter.com/oLDfElGnI9

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 19, 2026

Knight’s goal gave her sole possession of the all-time goal-scoring lead among American women at the Olympics, breaking a three-way tie between herself, Kathryn King and Natalie Darwitz. She had previously announced that this Olympic tournament would be her last, but when asked after the game whether that would be her last Olympic goal, she left it open-ended.

“We’ll see,” she said with a smile.

Team USA allowed just two goals during the tournament — one in the opening game and one in the gold medal game. Its shutout streak lasted a record-setting five games for a total of 331 minutes and 23 seconds of playing time.

APTOPIX Milan Cortina Olympics Ice Hockey
United States' Hilary Knight (21) celebrates after scoring an equalizer during a women's ice hockey gold medal game between the United States and Canada at the 2026 Winter Olympics, in Milan, Italy, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2026. | Petr David Josek, Associated Press

Penn State Hockey’s Tessa Janecke Wins Olympic Gold

MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 19: Ella Shelton #17 of Team Canada and Tessa Janecke #22 of Team United States skate after the puck in the second period during the Women's Gold Medal match between the United States and Canada on day 13 of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 19, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Penn State women’s hockey captain Tessa Janecke and the United States won the gold medal on Thursday with a 2-1 overtime win over Canada:

TESSA IS GOLDEN 🥇

Janecke joins Olympic royalty with a gold medal at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics as the United States defeated Canada, 2-1, in overtime 🇺🇸#WeAre#HockeyValley#OlympiansMadeHerepic.twitter.com/ekGHp2ALJq

— Penn State Women’s Hockey (@PennStateWHKY) February 19, 2026

Janecke had five assists in six games in the tournament and was on the ice for both goals in the gold medal game. She forced multiple turnovers in overtime on the forecheck, including one along the boards that eventually led to the golden goal.

Hilary Knight tied the game for the United States with two minutes left in regulation on a perfect deflection of Laila Edwards’ slap shot. Megan Keller won the gold for the Americans in overtime when she skated through two Canadians and slipped a backhand shot past Ann-Renée Desbiens.

Penn State hockey’s all-time points leader, Janecke is the first Penn State player to win an Olympic medal in ice hockey. She will return to State College looking to add an NCAA Championship to her impressive career resume.

Longtime Dodgers executive Lon Rosen becomes Lakers' president of business operations

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) — Longtime Los Angeles Dodgers executive Lon Rosen is moving into the Los Angeles Lakers ' front office in the latest significant change for the 17-time NBA champion organization following its sale last year.

Rosen will be the Lakers' president of business operations, the team announced Thursday. He replaces Tim Harris, who is planning to step down after 35 years with the Lakers.

Rosen has been the Dodgers' executive vice president and chief marketing officer since 2012, the same year Mark Walter purchased the baseball team. The Dodgers have become a powerhouse under Walter's ownership on and off the field, amassing star-studded rosters that have won three of the last six World Series.

Walter finalized his purchase of the Lakers in October, buying majority ownership from Jeanie Buss and her family from a reported $10 billion franchise valuation.

“Finding someone who could fill Tim’s shoes overseeing the business side of our organization would never be easy,” Buss said in a statement. “The answer, we soon realized, was someone both Mark and I knew well — and who already understood the values, culture and commitment to excellence of both the Dodgers and the Lakers.”

Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka said earlier this month that his team will begin to emulate aspects of the Dodgers' successful front-office structure. The Lakers have long been perceived as running one of the NBA's thinner front offices, and Pelinka said Walter's Lakers intend to add depth and talent across their off-the-court organization.

Rosen actually began his sports career with the 1980s Showtime Lakers as an intern and a front office executive. He went on to become an agent and a business partner of Magic Johnson before joining the Dodgers.

Jeanie Buss' younger brothers, Joey and Jesse, left their front-office positions a few weeks after Walter finalized his purchase. Jeanie Buss will remain the Lakers' governor under Walter's ownership for the foreseeable future.

___

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/NBA

Bengals are best landing spot for Jaguars LB who had 99-yard pick-six off Patrick Mahomes

Bengals are best landing spot for Jaguars LB who had 99-yard pick-six off Patrick Mahomes originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The Cincinnati Bengals are entering the 2026 offseason with some major needs on the defensive side of the ball. While they could use pass rusher and defensive back help, the Bengals have an underrated need at linebacker.

Fortunately for the Bengals, there are plenty of great linebackers both in the 2026 NFL Draft and in free agency. With their two rookies drafted in 2025, Demetrius Knight Jr. and Barrett Carter, signing a veteran in free agency seems to be the best option.

If they do choose that option, then, as PFF.com's Mason Cameron writes, the Bengals would be a great landing spot for a Jacksonville Jaguars linebacker who had a 99-yard pick-six of Patrick Mahomes in 2026: Pro Bowler Devin Lloyd.

Bengals named best landing spot for Devin Lloyd

"Devin Lloyd fits the bill as the top free-agent linebacker this cycle, with a resume to back it up," Cameron writes. "The 27-year-old posted the second-highest PFF overall grade (89.1) among qualifying linebackers during the regular season."

The Bengals linebacker room and the entire defense need overhauling. What better way than to add a linebacker who's coming off his best season in the NFL and is still just 27 years old?

After four years in Jacksonville, Lloyd is set to leave, cashing in on his Pro Bowl 2025 season. He was also second-team All-Pro, in what's easily the best year of his career.

MoreBengals get good news amid $50 million contract projection for Trey Hendrickson

He had five interceptions, including that 99-yard pick-six of Mahomes in primetime. He also had seven passes defended, one fumble recovery, 1.5 sacks, 81 total tackles, six tackles for loss, 10 quarterback hits, and a career-best 57.1 passer rating in coverage.

The 2022 first-round pick at 27th overall is a great linebacker to go after for the Bengals this offseason, as his veteran presence is the exact kind of player this defense needs.

Cameron has the Bengals as his best landing spot, and with how badly the Bengals need overall help on defense, Lloyd would be a great anchor for the middle of the defense for Al Golden to build around this offseason.

More Bengals news:

TST Today: LA All-Star Access & Dodgers Spring Training Vibes

San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama (1) talks to the press during media availability at NBA All Star Media Day on February 14, 2026 in Inglewood, CA.
San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama (1) talks to the press during media availability at NBA All Star Media Day on February 14, 2026 in Inglewood, CA.

Welcome to The Sporting Tribune Podcast Network and a new episode of The Sporting Tribune Today, our every-weekday show on sports in Southern California, Las Vegas and Hawaii. 

On today’s episode of The Sporting Tribune Today, your hosts — Arash Markazi, Grant Mona, and Anwar Stetson — along with guests Eric Lambkins II and Mykell Mathieu, bring you an inside look at two big baseball stories: covering the NBA All-Star Game as media, and the early Dodgers spring training atmosphere as teams ramp up for Cactus League play.

Segment One — Behind the Scenes Covering the All-Star Game

The group opens with a roundtable on what it’s like to cover the NBA All-Star Game as part of the media, sharing firsthand experiences from player availability, press access, and the energy of the event. They break down the buzz around player interviews, how All-Star Weekend feels from the press box versus the stands, and what moments stood out most — from surprise performances to memorable sound bites and storylines that defined the weekend.

Segment Two — Dodgers Spring Training Vibes & Lambkins on DeBartolo Contact

In segment two, the conversation shifts to MLB as spring training gets underway. The panel discusses the feel of Dodgers camp, including the influx of 32 non-roster invitees mixing with established stars as Los Angeles prepares for another deep run. Fans and analysts alike are buzzing about the energy at Camelback Ranch as pitchers and catchers have already reported and early workouts begin, signaling that Opening Day is just weeks away.

Eric Lambkins II also shares a unique angle on his contact with former 49ers owner Eddie DeBartolo Jr., reflecting on the intersection of NFL history and current L.A. sports culture — giving a rare behind-the-scenes perspective that goes beyond the field (context on DeBartolo’s legacy as a five-Super-Bowl winning owner is a touchpoint for this conversation).

The podcast can be heard every day on Apple, Google, Spotify, iHeart Radio, TuneIn and wherever you get your podcast and every weekday on the radio on KIRN 670 AM and 95.5 FMHD3 in Southern California, 98.5 The Bet in Las Vegas and the Hawaii Sports Radio Network 95.1 FM and 760 AM in Hawaii.



https://t.co/wK5zgtaULQ

— The Sporting Tribune (@SportingTrib) February 18, 2026


Cam Newtown receives backlash on his latest comments about women

Former NFL MVP Cam Newton has always had a controversial take on his relationships with women.

Newton, who has never been married, has nine kids with three different women and has made it clear he has no interest in getting married anytime soon, but we never knew why until now.

Newton says in this latest interview on the podcast “It’s Giving” that he doesn’t believe in unconditional love, and women lose value the more children they have.

“Women's value get lower the more children that they have,” he said. 

He said he told one of his baby mama’s her next relationship won’t work unless the next guy loves her kids with other men too. 

Another bomb shell he dropped was that he doesn’t believe in unconditional love. He says that only comes from his parents and his kids.

You have to give Newton credit; he’s not afraid or ashamed to share his views on women across various podcasts, despite what a lot of people think about him.

However, you have to wonder if his worldview of women is going to cost him gigs eventually or if it may already have with the cancellation of 106 and Sports on BET.

This article originally appeared on Touchdown Wire: Cam Newtown receives backlash on his latest comments about women

Alejandro Balde: Christopher Vivell sends transfer message to United

Alejandro Balde: Christopher Vivell sends transfer message to United
Alejandro Balde: Christopher Vivell sends transfer message to United

Manchester United appointed Christopher Vivell as their permanent director of recruitment in February last year.

The German, who previously enjoyed promising stints at Red Bull and Chelsea before joining United, had a significant influence on the club’s transfer business last summer.

In particular, it was Vivell who led United’s pursuit of Benjamin Sesko, convincing Ineos to spend €85 million on the relatively inexperienced RB Leipzig striker. To Vivell’s credit, Sesko has enjoyed a promising debut season at Old Trafford given the circumstances.

Christopher Vivell keen on Alejandro Balde

Plans are already underway at Manchester United for the upcoming transfer window, and Christopher Vivell has set his sights on another highly rated youngster.

According to journalist Ben Jacobs, the United chief has proposed Alejandro Balde as a target to strengthen the club’s left flank.

Christopher Vivell's top five signings

Before his unfortunate injury, Patrick Dorgu showed signs of promise as a winger. Meanwhile, Luke Shaw has impressed when in possession of the ball, but his physical decline has made him a liability out wide. As such, United are thought to be looking for a new left-back.

In that regard, Balde, 22, could prove to be a shrewd addition for the Red Devils. The Barcelona academy product possesses immense pace and exceptional ball-carrying ability.

Recently, The Peoples Person relayed a report from Spain claiming United are prepared to spend €40m (£34.98m) on the Spain international.

However, Jacobs underlines that Balde’s preference is to remain at Camp Nou. It is added that no formal discussions have taken place so far, either with the Spaniard or between the two clubs.

Manchester United frustrated by Barcelona’s antics

Meanwhile, Barcelona have begun working on keeping Marcus Rashford beyond his season-long loan, but United are reportedly dreading entering discussions with their Spanish counterparts.

The Blaugrana have an option to sign Rashford permanently for £26 million. However, the financially stricken club are hoping to renegotiate terms towards a lower price. The club’s hierarchy are hoping to take advantage of the Englishman’s desire to continue in Spain.

This has reportedly caused anger at United, with the decision-makers “ruing the arrangement” agreed last summer.

Given the prolific campaign Rashford has had, the Premier League giants should not budge from their demands and could use the opportunity to explore the possibility of signing someone like Balde in exchange.

Feature image Judit Cartiel via Getty Images

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The Peoples Person has been one of the world’s leading Man United news sites for over a decade. Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

Richard Hughes finds star to replace 'heroic' Liverpool ace

Richard Hughes finds star to replace 'heroic' Liverpool ace
Richard Hughes finds star to replace 'heroic' Liverpool ace

Liverpool are now 'monitoring' Olympiakos goalkeeper Konstantinos Tzolakis

Liverpool's goalkeeping ranks have been fairly stacked over the last couple of years.

Alisson has been the Reds' first-choice goalkeeper and up until this season, Caoimhin Kelleher was his back-up.

This summer, Kelleher chose to pack his bags and join Brentford which resulted in Giorgi Mamardashvili coming in to be Liverpool's second-choice 'keeper.

And, even though the Georgian has put in some fairly impressive performances when he's filled in for the Brazilian, it feels like his future could lie away from Anfield if a fresh report from Area Napoli is to be believed.

The report starts by saying that Roma, Juventus and Napoli are all interested in acquiring Konstantinos Tzolakis' services with the 'keeper 'keen' on a move to the Serie A.

Olympiakos are asking for a fee worth around £17 million for their star man which feels like a fairly reasonable fee.

Area Napoli also share that Liverpool and Arsenal have been 'monitoring him in recent months' despite their goalkeeping positions already being filled.

As mentioned, when Mamardashvili has played for Liverpool this season, he's often put in rather solid performances.

The Georgian was Valencia's starting goalkeeper last term and, even though he has been given the odd chance by Slot this season, if Tzolakis is brought in, it's hard to see a way back into the team for the Georgian.

Of course, Alisson's contract is set to expire in 2027 so the Greece international could be seen as his replacement but, with the performances that the Brazilian has put in over the last couple of months, it's hard to see why the Reds would let him go.

Succession plans obviously need to be made for when players exit Anfield but, since Alisson is only 33 years old, he still has plenty of time to be Liverpool's starting 'keeper.

Tzolakis' future is obviously still up in the air at the moment but, if Liverpool really want to sign the Olympiakos ace, it doesn't feel like the £17 million fee will put them off, especially if they see him as the next big thing.

The only problem that they'd be faced with is what to do with Mamardashvili, especially since he's been described as a "heroic" player due to his previous performances.

Liverpool in for surprise €20m transfer but Arsenal will put up a fight

Liverpool in for surprise €20m transfer but Arsenal will put up a fight
Liverpool in for surprise €20m transfer but Arsenal will put up a fight

Liverpool in for Konstantinos Tzolakis

Liverpool are looking at a deal for Olympiakos goalkeeper Konstantinos Tzolakis, says Arena Napoli. They’re reporting on Napoli’s interest in the 23-year-old and it seems there’s a battle for the player.

Arsenal are also in for Tzolakis, with his club wanting around €20m to get a deal done. Olympiakos owner, Nottingham Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis, is hoping the interest from the Premier League pair is real, given they’d almost certainly end up paying far more than Napoli.

But it’s a surprising one from Liverpool. Tzolakis will surely only move somewhere that he has a proper pathway to the first-team but the Reds have both Alisson Becker and Giorgi Mamardashvili in the way.

Alisson’s contract does expire next year, however. It could be that Tzolaki is a replacement for the Brazilian - someone who could rival Mamardashvili for a first-team place.

It feels like a real gamble, though. €20m for a Greek Super League goalkeeper to potentially be the no1? It doesn’t necessarily fit in with Liverpool’s transfer plans of late.

San Francisco 49ers Could Be Ready to Trade Pro Bowl Player

As many anticipated, the San Francisco 49ers bounced back and returned to the playoffs this season. Yet, as general manager John Lynch and head coach Kyle Shanahan know, nothing is guaranteed year-to-year.

Changes are bound to hit the 49ers again. They may even trade a Pro Bowl player who heavily contributed to their success in 2025.

While offseason discussions thus far have indicated that the 49ers don’t want to trade Mac Jones, who led the team to a 5-3 record this season. That mindset could be changing.

According to The Athletic‘s Matt Barrows, the “stars could be aligning” for the 49ers to trade Jones.

“Still, circumstances are aligning to create an offer that might be hard to refuse.”

Several teams could have an interest in gambling on Jones becoming their starting quarterback. It helps that Jones just spent a season mastering Kyle Shanahan’s playbook, and several teams operate a similar offense.

Barrows speculates that the teams that could have an interest in trading for the former first-round pick include the Arizona Cardinals, Miami Dolphins, and Minnesota Vikings.

The Cardinals just hired Mike LaFleur, who spent four seasons coaching under Shanahan in San Francisco. Dolphins offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik spent six seasons coaching under Shanahan. Meanwhile, the Vikings use concepts from Shanahan’s offense that Kevin O’Connell has adapted over the years.

Any of the three teams would make sense if the price is right this offseason. But the 49ers have to be willing to listen too.

Related: 5 Best Mike Evans Free Agency Landing Spots

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This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: The Miami Heat converted two-way guard Myron Gardner …

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The Denver Nuggets have signed guard KJ Simpson to a two-way contract, Ben Tenzer, Executive Vice President of Basketball Operations, and Jonathan Wallace, Executive Vice President of Player Personnel, announced today.

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This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: The Denver Nuggets have signed guard KJ Simpson to a …

USA vs. Canada box score: Full stats from 2026 Olympic women's hockey gold medal game

USA vs. Canada box score: Full stats from 2026 Olympic women's hockey gold medal game originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

After their heartbreaking loss to Canada in the gold medal game four years ago, the United States women’s hockey team was set up with the ultimate revenge game scenario.

In their first game of the 2026 Winter Games, the U.S. team showed incredible skill and confidence, winning 5-0 and moving smoothly into the knockout rounds at the top of the standings.

In an exhilarating finish at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan, the United States just narrowly beat Canada 2–1 in overtime to claim the women's ice hockey gold medal.

The game kicked off with a cautious first period, ending goalless as both teams played smart and solid defense. Early in the second, Canada took the lead when Kristin O'Neill scored a short-handed breakaway, marking the first time Team USA was trailing in the entire tournament.

With just 2:04 remaining in regulation and their goalie pulled for an extra attacker, U.S. captain Hilary Knight redirected a shot to tie the game at 1–1. This pivotal goal made Knight the all-time leader for U.S. women’s hockey in Olympic points (33) and goals (15).

In a thrilling 3-on-3 overtime, Megan Keller netted the golden goal, securing Team USA's victory and the gold medal.

MORE 2026 OLYMPICS: Live medal tracker | Viewer's guide | Day-by-day schedule

USA vs. Canada women's hockey box score

123F/OT
USA0012
Canada0101

USA stats

PlayerPosGAPts+/-Time on Ice
Caroline HarveyD000023:53
Hannah BilkaF000-119:20
Abbey MurphyF000019:54
Laila EdwardsF010022:30
Kirsten SimmsF00000:00
Hilary KnightF100018:38
Tessa JaneckeF000+214:49
Haley WinnD000020:15
Britta CurlF000013:41
Alex CarpenterF000019:28
Taylor HeiseF010+219:24
Megan KellerD110+125:13
Cayla BarnesD000015:43
Lee SteckleinD000014:43
Kelly PannekF000010:59
Joy DunneF000014:43
Hayley ScamurraF00008:14
Rory GuildayD00000:00
GoalieTeamShots FacedSavesGoals AllowedSave %
Aerin FrankelUSA3130196

Canada stats 

PlayerPosGAPts+/-Time on Ice
Sarah FillierF000018:56
Sarah NurseF000017:40
Brianne JennerF000016:39
Natalie SpoonerF00005:10
Laura StaceyF000022:28
Erin AmbroseD000+115:11
Renata FastD010-131:22
Jocelyne LarocqueD000+115:43
Blayre TurnbullF000-119:42
Kristin O'NeillF100+15:41
Emily ClarkF000-218:01
Marie Philip-PoulinF000-118:21
Julia GoslingF00005:34
Claire ThompsonD000-118:01
Ella SheltonD000-128:25
Saryl WattsF000021:55
GoalieTeamShots FacedSavesGoals AllowedSave %
Ann-Renée DesbiensCAN3331293

MORE: Winter Olympics medal tracker 2026 

​Pansexual figure skater Amber Glenn's rollercoaster Olympic debut made us proud

​ Amber Glenn

Pansexual figure skater Amber Glenn has had a rollercoaster first Olympics.

After becoming the first openly LGBTQ+ woman to score a spot on the U.S. figure skating team, she made a splash at the Winter Games by winning a gold medal as part of the team event, before dropping from the top of the podium to 13th place after a particularly disastrous short program performance.

But the queer community should still be proud of Glenn, who picked herself up, dusted herself off, and went on to soar to a season’s best score of 147.52 in the free skate on Feb. 19.

She may not be picking up a singles medal at the Milano Cortina Olympics, but Glenn opened her free skate with a flawless triple Axel, and although she made a mistake at the end of her performance, she was clearly proud of her accomplishments and gave her signature fist pump at center ice.

While on the kiss-and-cry couch awaiting her scores, Glenn could be heard saying, "I’m at the Olympics. I didn’t fall. I didn’t fall at the Olympics.”

After redeeming herself with her free skate, Glenn told NBC that she was proud of herself. “I told myself enjoy it, and I had my moment in my spiral,” she said. "I told myself, 'You just skated, stayed on your feet at the Olympics.’ I am proud that I was able to have that moment.”

Glenn, who at 26 years old made her Olympic debut, said she was fighting for the little girl she used to be.

“That six-year-old girl that never thought I’d ever be here, so I just told myself to go out there, do your job," Glenn said. "I was working toward being able to have that moment [step] sequence, that was my reward.”

This article originally appeared on Pride: ​Pansexual figure skater Amber Glenn's rollercoaster Olympic debut made us proud

Texans' Dalton Schultz offers interesting C.J. Stroud playoff take

CJ Stroud

Texans' Dalton Schultz offers interesting C.J. Stroud playoff take originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Houston Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud is likely at the lowest point of his NFL career this offseason after the team's horror playoff exit.

The loss to the New England Patriots was horrible, with Stroud throwing four first-half interceptions that paved the way for the loss.

As such, the pitchforks have been out for C.J. and rightly so, as the performance wasn't good.

But as tight end Dalton Schultz points out, Stroud's struggles against New England weren't all on him.

"Everybody's got to turn themselves," Schultz said on the Ross Tucker Football podcast. "It's not all on C.J. Do you think he throws some of those picks if he didn't have a guy in his lap? Everything is so entangled in football that it's hard to put anything on one guy ever."

More:Chiefs' Chris Jones rips ESPN analyst over Travis Kelce comments

Is Schultz right?

Of course he is. But here's the problem.

When you are the franchise quarterback, or a quarterback at all for that matter, you get all the praise when it goes right, even if you didn't have a big hand to play in the win. And then you get all the blame when things go south.

That's part and parcel of the position. Plus, it comes with the territory of being the face of the franchise.

Look, most know it wasn't all on Stroud, but four first-half interceptions are tough to get away from. 

Some have said C.J. melted down, and there is some truth to that, as there are Schultz's comments.

Unfortunately, when it comes to how Stroud is viewed league-wide, it doesn't matter.

All that matters is that the Texans lost, and Stroud threw four interceptions.

More NFL news:

Who were the 5 most valuable 49ers in 2025?

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - JANUARY 17: Brock Purdy #13 of the San Francisco 49ers reacts after an interception during the third quarter against the Seattle Seahawks in the NFC Divisional Playoff game at Lumen Field on January 17, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In a year with a multitude of injuries, there were several players who stepped up for the San Francisco 49ers in 2025 and others who maintained a high level of play.

With that said, let’s revisit the 2025 season and look at who were the team’s most valuable players last year, ranking the top five in no order.

Honorable Mentions: Mac Jones, George Kittle

These two earned honorable mentions because they didn’t play for the whole season, but were crucial when on the field.

The 49ers don’t make the playoffs without Mac Jones, who played well in relief of Brock Purdy and had a 5-3 record as a starter. Similarly, George Kittle only played 11 games, but recorded 57 catches for 628 yards and seven touchdowns for the 49ers.

He was especially huge during San Francisco’s five-game winning streak, averaging 6.2 catches and 83 yards per game in that stretch, while scoring four touchdowns.

Christian McCaffrey

McCaffrey was fourth in MVP voting and won the Comeback Player of the Year Award after going over 2,000 yards from scrimmage and recording 17 touchdowns.

He was a workhorse, rushing for 1,202 yards and 10 touchdowns on 311 carries (second most in NFL), while catching 102 passes for 924 yards and seven more scores. He was in the top 10 for receptions as a running back, and really got going towards the end of the season as a rusher.

Yes, the efficiency and chunk plays weren’t up to par for McCaffrey, but his ability as a pass-catcher was huge for the 49ers offense.

Brock Purdy

Purdy only played in nine games, but he was quite important to the 49ers success down the stretch. After throwing seven interceptions in his first four starts of the year, Purdy turned things around and had a pair of five-touchdown games while leading the offense during the five-game win streak.

He finished the year with 2,167 yards, 20 touchdowns, and 10 interceptions, while going 7-2 as the starter in the regular season.

Trent Williams

Williams wasn’t on the NFL Protector of the Year list, but he had big responsibilities for the 49ers as the anchor at left tackle, and was crucial to the offensive line’s success as a whole. While he’s heading into his age-38 season, Williams is still playing at a very good level and had an underrated year in 2025 after dealing with injuries in 2024.

It wouldn’t be a surprise to see him get extended this offseason with one year left on his deal.

Upton Stout

Stout had a learning curve as a rookie, getting targeted quite often earlier in the year. But he had serious growth as the season went on and was one of the team’s best defenders over the second half of the season.

He added physicality and strong man coverage skills to an inconsistent secondary and proved to be a key contributor in Year 1.

Eddy Piniero

The 49ers got an elite kicker from free agency in Week 2 after releasing Jake Moody, as Piniero missed just one field goal during the regular season, going 28 of 29 on the year.

He was stellar from all ranges, even hitting a 59-yard field goal, and was crucial in a number of close games for the 49ers. He’s a key player to bring back in the offseason.

Club planning to accept deal to sell Liverpool their €35m star talent

Club planning to accept deal to sell Liverpool their €35m star talent
Club planning to accept deal to sell Liverpool their €35m star talent

Palmeiras seak Liverpool deal

Brazilian club Palmeiras actively hope to seal a deal with Liverpool according to local outlet 'The Football'. Allan is the player in question, with €35m the hoped-for fee.

Palmeiras want to open this kind of partnership with the Reds, having previously done with Chelsea and Real Madrid for Estevao and Endrick. There's interest in Allan from plenty of clubs, clubs offering good fees, too, but they hope to 'open another door with a strong club from Europe'.

Rory McIlroy said recent trip to Augusta was 'somewhat nostalgic'

The Genesis Invitational is top of mind this week for Rory McIlroy, but Wednesday marked 50 days out from the 2026 Masters, where the Northern Irishman will be the defending champion for the first time.

During a Q&A with media just off the 18th green at Riviera Country Club the day before the first round of the 2026 Genesis, McIlroy was asked about an upcoming visit to Augusta National Golf Club.

There's often a bit of intrigue about trips to the private club and with McIlroy it's no different. He confirmed a trip to Augusta with his dad is coming up.

Rory McIlroy chats with media just off the 18th green ahead of the 2026 Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club.

"I'm going to go up there and play with the chairman next week actually," he said, adding that this will not be his first trip back since winning the green jacket last April, as he had already paid another visit. "It was cool to get up to the champions locker room and see my nameplate alongside the other two champions that I share a locker with. It was somewhat nostalgic. I wouldn't say it was emotional but definitely there was nice memories. Different feels the first time staying on site without having to need a member there. There's a lot of perks you get with being a champion."

McIlroy said this trip wasn't really just to play the golf course.

More: The Masters is 50 days out. What you need to know about the 90th edition

"It wasn't even a round. I was doing some filming up there," he said, noting the one change that was made to the layout. "I was out on the course and was hitting some shots, but the course isn't real different. They haven't moved the tee box of 17 back, they've moved the plate where it was played from back 10 yards to make it 10 yards longer. But apart from that, the course is pretty much the same."

The 2026 Masters is set for April 9-12. McIlroy will attempt to become the fourth repeat champion, joining Jack Nicklaus (1965, 1966) Nick Faldo (1989, 1990) and Tiger Woods (2001, 2002).

This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Rory McIlroy recently visited Augusta National, said it was nostalgic

So you think you can build an NCAA bracket? Behind the scenes of the arduous March Madness process 

Feb. 11, 2026 An Indianapolis hotel

I’m staring at a collection of 1,095 circles organized by threes into tidy columns, visions of scantrons past dancing in my head. The fact that no one holds a master answer key does nothing to quell the stress of getting it right. 

It’s edging late into the night in Indianapolis ahead of the NCAA women’s basketball selection committee’s mock selection exercise at the national office, and I’m agonizing over this page. My task is to rank the 30-plus at-large teams I shaded for selection to or consideration for the NCAA tournament field. Washington above Notre Dame? Where do Princeton or Georgia fit? Is Syracuse No. 35 or a first-four out? 

At a breaking point, I begin scribbling school names onto a piece of stationery with alternating colored lines. There are too many variables to consider. Too few hairs to split between. By the time I reach “28,” I’m judging selections loosely on NET rankings with a pinch of any random criteria fitting the bill. I feel like the human embodiment of the shrug emoji as I try to rationalize each decision; I mentally force the flexed-biceps emoji instead.  

Do I think I can build an NCAA bracket? Of course. Don’t we all? 

Feb. 12, 2026 1:15 p.m. ET NCAA headquarters

A selection of reporters, broadcasters, conference personnel and NCAA leadership walk into a boardroom. The tables are arranged like a rectangular 2000s computer lab, the March Madness laptops and mice splayed in front of flat screens lowered in the middle of the room, facing the attendees. 

Those of us on the board-for-a-day go around and make introductions. If this were the real committee meeting, there would be no need. The time-intensive process of selecting, seeding and bracketing teams into the tournament field begins months prior to March. 

Each of the 12-person committee serves a five-year term and is assigned to monitor a primary conference and a secondary one. There are weekly and monthly check-ins that might include information like the impact of last month’s winter storm on teams and scheduling. Did a key player miss time? Was there a conference-defining victory recently? Who is in contention for an at-large bid?

(Cassandra Negley/Yahoo Sports)
(Cassandra Negley/Yahoo Sports)
(Cassandra Negley/Yahoo Sports)

They give reports at each of these committee meetings throughout the season, as well as reports from head coaches within regional advisory committees. They discuss game results, metrics, matchups to watch and rewatch. Their true work occurs during the long days from the Wednesday before Selection Sunday until hours before the reveal.  

Every bit of information a committee member receives needs to be shared with the group for optimal results. Everything is based on integrity in the three-prong process. Selection is the body of work. Seeding is the “who are they right now?” Bracketing is … well, that comes later.  

All conferences are discussed. All relevant conversations stay in the room. And historical benchmarks mean nothing.

2:15 p.m.

There are no March Madness-branded “I voted” stickers at the NCAA headquarters. If there were, they would run out fast. Unbeknownst to us newbies who agonized over the exact line seeding of our teams the night prior, our exact listing is irrelevant. It’s time to vote and vote and vote again as we whittle down a large group into chunks of entries. 

First, we each privately input into the software the names of up to 24 teams we believe should be at-large selections, plus an unlimited number of those under consideration. Teams are moved onto the at-large nomination board based on how many votes they received in each category. Our vote moved 22 onto the board. 

We then continue to evaluate using the committee's "list eight, rank eight, move four" process. We vote in our top eight selections from the board, resulting in a collective eight that move into a new board. We rank those eight individually, leading into four that will move into the field. We keep going in that manner, until it’s close to the end when cuts are near. The committee can then vote in two and even one sole team at a time. 

This is the process of selecting and later seeding a field. It’s arduous and intentional, a fail-safe to properly fit in each worthy team in a way that befits their résumé. 

It’s also very confusing, even to those of us in the room digitally clicking the bubbles of our choices, which is why the NCAA outlined, for transparency, the exact procedural steps. Because as much as the basketball of March Madness is a national pastime, so, too, is analyzing the committee’s work building a bracket. At least one fan base is bound to be mad, lobbing allegations of bias or purposefully helping/hurting their team. 

Dawn Staley felt her South Carolina Gamecocks were snubbed from the No. 1 overall seed last year. UConn fans were outraged about being placed on the West Coast, while for much of the previous decade, those outside Storrs were upset at the team’s prime regional location being a couple hours max from campus. There is a high chance this year that TCU, as a double-digit seed, doesn’t leave its own bed until the Final Four. 

None of that context is on the selection committee’s minds through this process. And if someone, for example, mentions as we’re seeding the 4-line that we’re voting for the final teams we believe should be hosting first-and-second round games, they’re politely corrected by the chair. It is about the next four best teams on the mini board that should be in the field. 

The results should not impact the process itself.

4 p.m.

It’s all made up, and the quads don’t matter. At least, that’s the joke running in my head. 

The time is finally here to seed teams, and the mock chair has been waiting to strike up this conversation. It’s UConn, right? Or, for the sake of discussion, could it be UCLA with its 14 Quad 1 wins?

Ah, but hold on. That large-font list of team selection criteria/priorities placed to the left of each computer doesn’t say anything about quadrant victories. NCAA personnel tell us that the four quadrants are an organizational tool for delineating game data into digestible points. Not all of them are built equal. Defeating a team ranked second in NET is different from one ranked 20th, even if they are both Quad 1. Context is ingrained everywhere.

Therefore, it isn’t a reason to seed a team before or after another. And with that, my muscle emoji begins to fade. I’d like to crumple up and shoot my top 30 list into a garbage can for at least one swish on the day. 

The chair decides we should go down the list (in alphabetical order) to compare: bad losses, common opponents, competitive in losses, early performance vs late performance, head-to-head, NET ranking, observable component, overall record, regional rankings, significant wins, strength of schedule, Wins Above Bubble (WAB) ranking. 

The instructors identify one major data point to which the committee has privileged access. There are five regions for the 32 conferences, and though it sounds odd, the Big Ten and Big East are together in one of those regions. Three times a year, the coaches rank the top 20 teams, and if we were the committee, we could ask the member leading that to tell us the coaches’ thoughts. We would then use it to inform our personal voting decision. 

It’s one of the most illuminating pieces of information of the day. The selection committee is often treated as a table of deities pulling levers and bopping buttons to design a bracket of their choosing. That’s not quite true. They are guided by rules and regulations, criteria and principles, and most importantly, they do not make these selections in a vacuum of their own control. 

We vote and vote, and end up with UConn, UCLA, South Carolina and Texas as our 1-4 seeds. Are we all good with that? 

I’m not. Nor are a few others in the room. We glance at our list of criteria/principles to hit our talking points. Texas and South Carolina split the season series, are similar in NET ranking and each lost to a different SEC power. Texas played the more difficult schedule, had the higher non-conference WAB and defeated UCLA, our No. 2 seed. 

If it were the actual committee, the chair could opt to put it to a secret vote: South Carolina or Texas for the No. 3 overall seed? And it’s not a one-shot choice, as real committee members reminded us consistently. Every day leading up to Selection Sunday, the committee could and would reassess any part of their work. 

Time to move on. We speed-seed the top 16 teams before dinner. Quite a few tiebreakers come up if two teams acquired the same number of points within a single ballot. LSU and Louisville are tied for the No. 6 seed. Louisville wins. Same for Kentucky and Michigan State at No. 14. This will be a more time-intensive process the week of Selection Sunday. 

At the moment, it all seems trivial. By the end, we appreciate the magnitude. 

6:30 p.m.

The impact of the Texas-South Carolina conversation lands as sour as the lemon cake at dinner. 

The NCAA tech team back-filled a full 68-team field for us so we could view the bracketing process in action. The flatscreens are filled with a spreadsheet separated into four columns, two each for the super-regional sites at Fort Worth and Sacramento. The seed list sits underneath. An NCAA administrator is poised with a list of principles. 

A cursor drags UConn to Fort Worth, the closer location of the two earned by the top overall seed. The Huskies will play Friday and Sunday, giving them the advantage of an extra day ahead of the Final Four. UCLA then goes to Sacramento, a move that benefits them, anyway. South Carolina is placed in Fort Worth, and Texas to Sacramento. 

The mock committee members begin to stir at the realization that one difference in true seed can impact more than the number. Texas could have been close to home, a pro for them as well as a fan attendance windfall, while South Carolina faced lengthy travel either way.  We can’t go back and adjust for that reason alone. We already did the work to fairly rank; now we’re bracketing based on that. 

It highlights that every opinion should be voiced, every critical decision put to a vote and that every individual seed deserves an in-depth conversation. It is a reality that carries on through the bracketing as we go seed-line by seed-line, taking into account travel distance from site, mode of transportation and fan accessibility. 

The errors compile. 

There are too many SEC and Big Ten teams. If the first four teams from one conference are seeded within the top four lines, they must be placed in different regionals. But, we also don’t want conference rematches until the regional final, whenever possible. The accumulation of seed numbers climbs at the bottom of each column as we attempt to keep it balanced. Our mock is a six-point differential. Not bad. 

The administrator lifts schools from the S-curve up into something of a criss-crossed zig-zag, daring someone to play connect-the-dots. It’s late, our mock chair accidentally found herself locked outside the floor-to-ceiling glass windows, and our brains are at capacity laughing at the absurdity. 

We’ve slammed multiple days of bracketing into a two-hour window, and I’m amazed my own personal seed-by-seed listing was my biggest conundrum 24 hours ago. Now we’re talking length of flights and fan attendance at first-round host sites; fairness and principles; if it’s right, the conference champion of America East might play the same second-round opponent in consecutive seasons. It’s too much for one person.

Each click of a team lights up the bracketing program like the ignition switch to a dying car’s dashboard. Don’t worry, some screens look more purple and others are more blue (denoting errors that violate various principles), we’re told. That doesn’t explain the other three colors glinting off the screens.

The program spells out the problem; it doesn’t solve it. That’s for us to puzzle out. The real committee will often save drafts at major conundrums so it can bracket out multiple versions. No matter which one is chosen, people are bound to be mad. 

9:20 p.m. An Indianapolis hotel

Back at the hotel bar, on the phone screen balancing against a stack of menus, Vanderbilt is beating the brakes off Texas. Arguing for the Longhorns as the No. 3 seed is a thing of the past. That same weekend, the real committee will move Texas down to No. 5.

Our mock bracket is already obsolete, less than an hour after we’ve called it a day. A few media members who have done this previously assured everyone before leaving that history says that will be the case. With our committee hats off, we can talk of tournaments past again. 

It is one thing to know the criteria and principles the committee follows to build a bracket. It is another entirely to sit in the room and experience a simulation of it. The informational input spreads far wider than 12 people’s thoughts, combined with stats on the screen. The voting system allows better fine-tuning than smushing together everyone’s lists. Processes for everything means no one can bend it to their own will. 

My pen will still be ready on Selection Sunday to mark up the bracket and scribble out talking points. Which teams were left on the bubble that shouldn’t have been? Is TCU really in Fort Worth? Did Duke deserve a better seed? But, I’ll also have a deeper appreciation for all the judgment calls that had to be made on a piece of paper that will eventually be ripped up by the masses. 

Everyone thinks they can build an NCAA bracket. That doesn’t mean it’s easy. 

Fenerbahce 0-3 Nottingham Forest: What Gibbs-White said

Nottingham Forest captain Morgan Gibbs-White, speaking to TNT Sports after a 3-0 win at Fenerbahce: "I felt we had a real identity out there. We defended well and we created so many chances."

On the new manager: "His message to us is that we will have a real identity how we play and defend as a team. We have all bought into what he wants straight away.

"It is about keep learning off each other and take it game by game.

"We needed a clean sheet and we needed a win and today felt like the perfect moment. Our fans were top tonight, they were incredible. An all-round incredible day.

"You want to enjoy every moment as a player. I said yesterday it can be difficult as footballer to enjoy moments because of how quick the games come up. We can enjoy it tonight and then prepare for Liverpool at the weekend.

"We have been going through a difficult time, confidence is the main thing and tonight will boost confidence. We just have to stay together and be the most complete team."

Did you know?

  • This was Fenerbahçe's joint-biggest home Europa League defeat, after also losing 3-0 to Borussia Monchengladbach in December 2012 and Olympiakos in September 2021.
  • With tonight's 3-0 victory, Nottingham Forest recorded their biggest ever away win in major European competition. It was also their first win in the knockout rounds of any European competition since defeating Lyon 1-0 in the first leg of their UEFA Cup round of 16 tie in November 1995.
  • Vitor Pereira has remained unbeaten in his first game in charge of a club, with Nottingham Forest his 15th spell at the helm of a team during his managerial career (W11 D4).
  • No player has netted more goals than Igor Jesus in the UEFA Europa League this season (7), while his seven strikes are now the outright-most for the club during a major European campaign, overtaking Gary Birtles' six during the 1978-79 European Cup.

Texas Longhorns Men's Basketball now 88.3% to make March Madness

A late season surge has put the Texas Longhorns men's basketball team of verge of making the NCAA Tournament. According to barttorvik, a leading college basketball numbers cruncher, the Horns have an 88.3% to make it to March Madness in Sean Miller's first year at the helm.

Just a month ago, USA TODAY Sports' Bracketology projected the Longhorns missing the tournament as one of the "First Four Out." But since mid-January, Texas has been hot. Late in January, UT was projected in the tournament, but firmly on the bubble as a No. 10 seed.

Since losing back-to-back games to Texas A&M and Kentucky last month, the Longhorns have gone 6-1 and are a perfect 4-0 in February. Many teams have used late season success to a deep run in March Madness. The current Bracketology has Texas as a No. 8 seed and firmly in the field.

Texas Men's Basketball now has a 88.3% chance of making the NCAA Tourney! (Via BartTorvik)

The Longhorns have won 5 straight games and they are currently tied for 5th in the SEC

The Horns play at Georgia on Saturday at 2:30PM pic.twitter.com/bKXZRCmRWw

— Orangebloods.com (@orangebloods_) February 19, 2026

The Longhorns have five regular season games left: Georgia, Florida, Texas A&M, Arkansas and Oklahoma. Four of the five are projected to make the tourney, with OU a bubble team. Florida and the Hogs are ranked.

While Texas is now and 88.3% to make the tourney, that means they are also 11.7% to miss March Madness. That almost 18% would come into play if Texas loses out. If UT goes 1-4 down the stretch, they had better win a couple games in the SEC Postseason Tournament.

But things are looking good for new coach Sean Miller. It should be a fun ride from here on out.

This article originally appeared on Longhorns Wire: Texas Longhorns Basketball now 88.3% to make NCAA Tournament

Dream start for Vitor Pereira’s Forest in Europa League play-off tie

Nottingham Forest enjoyed a sensational start to life under new manager Vitor Pereira, as they secured a commanding 3-0 victory away at Fenerbahce in the first leg of their Europa League play-off tie.

The emphatic win in Istanbul puts the Premier League side firmly in contention for a place in the last 16, marking a dream debut for Pereira, who becomes Forest's fourth manager of what has been a turbulent season.

Goals from Murillo, Igor Jesus, and Morgan Gibbs-White sealed a memorable night, providing a significant boost as the club navigates a challenging period.

This dominant performance means Forest are now strong favourites to progress, with only a catastrophic collapse in next week's return leg at the City Ground preventing a potential last-16 clash against either Real Betis or Midtjylland.

While European success is welcome, Pereira's primary mandate remains securing Forest's top-flight status. This result offers a crucial injection of confidence ahead of Sunday's crucial home fixture against Liverpool.

The Portuguese tactician, familiar with the Chobani Stadyumu from two previous stints managing the Turkish club, watched his side expertly nullify the early hostile atmosphere.

Goals from Murillo, Igor Jesus and Morgan Gibbs-White made it a memorable night for Forest as life after Sean Dyche began in freescoring fashion (Getty Images)
Goals from Murillo, Igor Jesus and Morgan Gibbs-White made it a memorable night for Forest as life after Sean Dyche began in freescoring fashion (Getty Images)

They established an accomplished rhythm, taking a deserved lead in the 21st minute and effectively silencing the home support.

Elliot Anderson passed to Murillo in the centre circle and the Brazil defender charged up the pitch and lashed a low shot into the bottom corner from 20 yards.

It was almost two moments later as Jesus played on, with Fenerbahce captain Milan Skriniar – the former Liverpool defender – down injured in the middle of the pitch.

Jesus wriggled into the box and had a fierce shot, but it hit Jayden Oosterwolde and went out from a corner.

The chances kept on coming as Gibbs-White headed straight at Ederson from eight yards out, Jesus could not direct a deflected free-kick goalwards and Callum Hudson-Odoi had a shot blocked.

Nottingham Forest's Ryan Yates, right, heads the ball against Fenerbahce's Ismail Yuksek during a Europa league play-off first leg soccer match between Fenerbahce and Nottingham Forest (AP)
Nottingham Forest's Ryan Yates, right, heads the ball against Fenerbahce's Ismail Yuksek during a Europa league play-off first leg soccer match between Fenerbahce and Nottingham Forest (AP)

Forest survived a scare before the break as a VAR check came back in their favour when Talisca’s shot hit the arm of Murillo, but it was ruled to be in a natural position.

And that proved pivotal as they doubled the lead in the 43rd minute.

Gibbs-White flicked on Anderson’s corner at the near post and Jesus was waiting at the back to nod home on the line.It was his sixth Europa League goal in seven games.

Fenerbahce had to come up with something in the second half and they almost got one back just 20 seconds after the restart when Sidiki Cherif got in down the right, but his effort was tipped over the crossbar by Stefan Ortega.

Any hopes of a home comeback were killed in the 50th minute as Forest went 3-0 up.

Jesus broke the offside trap and squared for Gibbs-White, who scooped the ball home from 12 yards.

It could have been even better, but Nicolas Dominguez whipped an effort over from a great position inside the area and Ederson got down well to deny Neco Williams.

RAF boss claims Daniel Cormier would lose to Jon Jones in wrestling — ‘I don’t think he can beat Jon at anything’

ANAHEIM, CA - JULY 29: Daniel Cormier reacts to losing to Jon Jones in the Light Heavyweight title bout during UFC 214 at Honda Center on July 29, 2017 in Anaheim, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Daniel Cormier recently challenged Jon Jones to a wrestling match for Real American Freestyle (RAF).

Careful what you wish for?

RAF co-founder Izzy Martinez believes “DC” would lose to “Bones” on the mats, just like he did inside the Octagon, first at UFC 182 and then again at UFC 214. Or maybe Martinez is just doing that promoter thing where he gets a talent riled up, said talent lashes out, hype gets manufactured, and boom we have a match.

“Daniel Cormier hasn’t beat Jon,” Martinez told MMA Junkie Radio. “I don’t think he can beat Jon at anything, but he needs to beat him at something, and the next best thing that he’s ever able to do is wrestle. So that’s always been the sh*t talk. ‘Oh, you could beat me in a fight, but I’d beat your ass in wrestling.’ Even when I was telling Hulk Hogan, it would be a hell of a dream because Daniel Cormier would actually think he’s going to come out here and kill Jon, and Jon will shock him again and the wrestling world will go crazy.”

Cormier, 46, was a three-time Louisiana state high school champion, a two-time junior college champion, and an NCAA All-American. “DC” would make the Olympic squad in 2004 and then again as Team Captain in 2008. As for Jones, 38, he won the New York state high school championship in 2005 and followed that up with an NJCAA National title for Iowa Central Community College the following year.

“Jon’s cool,” Martinez added. “He’s in his own world in a good way. He loves Gable Steveson. He’s down there. He loves his family. So I don’t think it’s a priority to put on wrestling shoes, give Daniel Cormier a shot at even coming close to him. I think Jon loves the fact that he lives in Cormier’s head. I don’t think Jon or ‘DC’ want to train that hard and put it on the line again. But if they do, they know who to call, baby.”

The first call will have to be to Jon’s orthopedist.

Mark Pope gives a discouraging update on Jayden Quaintance

The Kentucky Wildcats have dropped their last two games, on the road at Florida and at home against Georgia. Head coach Mark Pope spoke to the media postgame after Tuesday’s loss to the Bulldogs and expressed concern about the number of minutes his starters are playing and the team’s lack of depth at the moment.

One guy the Wildcats could use right now is potential lottery pick Jayden Quaintance. Pope is still a bit hesitant about Quaintance’s status, which is concerning given the team’s only five games remaining in the regular season.

“He continues to make progress,” said Pope of JQ. “He is not ready right now. He’s not ready, and we’re not going to roll him out there till he’s 100%, and he’s a ways from that.”

Quaintance hasn’t played or practiced since January 7th, so if he is able to start practicing, there will be a ramp-up period before he’s able to play in games.

“We haven’t incorporated him back into practice, so that’s complicated. I don’t know how optimistic I am about that.”

Pope has been adamant that he wants Quaintance 100% before he gets back on the floor.

“He’s making great progress, but with a guy as explosive as he is, he’s got to be 100 percent ready. We’re working him back slowly but positively.”

Coming off an ACL tear, the Arizona State transfer has appeared in four games for the Wildcats. He’s averaged 5 points, 5 rebounds, and 0.8 blocks a game when active for the Wildcats.

Until something changes, Kentucky fans should not get their hopes up on Quaintance playing again this season.

Draft analyst calls Indiana prospect 'the Ramsiest WR' in 2026 class

As the 2026 NFL Draft approaches, the Los Angeles Rams should be studying the wide receiver class closely. With Tutu Atwell hitting free agency and no other clear-cut WR3 on the roster, the Rams need a playmaker to go with Puka Nacua and Davante Adams Jr.

Indiana’s Omar Cooper Jr. might be just what the doctor ordered. Though he doesn’t boast a rare combination of size, speed or athleticism, he’s exactly the type of receiver the Rams tend to look for.

Cooper is 6 feet tall and around 200 pounds, but he’s as physical as any wideout in the draft. He’s excellent at picking up yards after the catch, not only with his elusiveness in the open field, but by fighting for extra yardage through sheer effort.

It’s similar to the way Nacua fights through contact with the ball in his hands.

Last season, Cooper caught 69 passes for 937 yards and scored 13 touchdowns, also rushing three times for 74 yards with one touchdown on the ground.

What makes him particularly intriguing for the Rams is his willingness to block. That’s something Sean McVay always asks of his receivers, which allows Los Angeles to stay in 11 personnel as often as it does.

NFL Network’s Daniel Jeremiah went as far as calling Cooper “the Ramsiest WR” in the class.

Looking at my Omar Cooper Jr notes- He's the Ramsiest WR in the draft.

— Daniel Jeremiah (@MoveTheSticks) February 18, 2026

Todd McShay also raved about Cooper on his podcast recently, describing him as the type of receiver the Rams tend look for in the draft.

“He’s the most consistent, reliable, toughest son of a (expletive) blocker in this class at wide receiver,” McShay said. “He’s 6-foot, maybe just shy, but his effort, his angles, his ability to sustain, the way he fights is unparalleled.”

If that doesn’t sound like a Rams receiver, what does?

McShay aptly compared him to Jarvis Landry, but a faster version of the former LSU standout.

“It’s like wide receiver heaven because when you start – (Landry’s) one of my favorite receivers to evaluate and now I’ve got a guy who’s so similar in so many ways, and is faster,” McShay added.

A physical slot receiver who can pick up yards after the catch would greatly benefit the Rams, allowing Nacua and Adams to align outside. Cooper isn’t exclusively a slot receiver, though, despite his lack of size. He can move around, just as Cooper Kupp did and just as Nacua does.

If the Rams are looking for a wideout late in the first round or potentially on Day 2, Cooper could be their guy.

This article originally appeared on Rams Wire: NFL draft: Indiana's Omar Cooper Jr. is type of WR Rams look for

Tennessee places two on late-season Naismith Trophy watch list

Tennessee forward Nate Ament (10) and guard Ja’Kobi Gillespie (0) during the NCAA college basketball game against Oklahoma on Feb. 18, 2026, in Knoxville, Tennessee. | Saul Young/News Sentinel / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Tennessee has placed two members on the late-season watch list for the Naismith Trophy. Point guard Ja’Kobi Gillespie and wing Nate Ament both made the cut for the award, which is given to the top player in college basketball each year.

The list features 30 of the top players in the country. Tennessee was one of five schools to have multiple players on the list, joining Arizona, Kansas, UConn and Texas Tech.

The SEC placed seven on the watchlist, with Arkansas’ Darius Acuff Jr., Auburn’s Keyshawn Hall, Florida’s Thomas Haugh, Alabama’s Labaron Philon Jr., and Vanderbilt’s Tyler Tanner joining Ament and Gillespie.

Ament, who has exploded over the last few weeks, was one of 11 freshmen to make the cut. The 6-10 wing has figured things out after a rough start, averaging well over 20 points per game now. It’s all working for Ament right now — passing, shooting, getting to the foul line — this is the top five overall prospect that we heard so much about heading into the season.

Gillespie is averaging 18.1 points and 5.5 assists per game in his lone season with the Volunteers. He’s shooting 35 percent from three, playing more consistently now with Ament picking up so much of the scoring load.

The two have led Tennessee to a 19-7 overall record with a 9-4 mark in SEC play. The Volunteers are in a three-way tie for second place in the conference standings with everyone still chasing Florida.

Tennessee will try to keep it going on Saturday with a trip to Vanderbilt.

Canadian freeskier Cassie Sharpe crashes and is stretchered off halfpipe during qualifying

LIVIGNO, Italy (AP) — Two-time Olympic medalist Cassie Sharpe was stretchered off the halfpipe after the Canadian freeskier crashed during qualifying at the Milan Cortina Games on Thursday night.

The 33-year-old Sharpe slammed hard on her left side after landing a jump off-balance and slid face-down to the bottom of the halfpipe.

After being attended to by medical staff for several minutes, Sharpe waved while being pulled away on the stretcher.

She fell on the latter of her two qualifying runs. After her first run, she was in second place, making it likely she will become one of the top 12 skiers who get a spot in Saturday's final.

Sharpe won the gold medal in halfpipe at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games and took silver four years later in Beijing.

___

AP Winter Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

Answering the NFL offseason's biggest questions: Giants draft plans, Patriots free agency targets & more

Subscribe to Football 301 with Nate Tice

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Nate Tice & Charles McDonald join forces to answer the NFL offseason’s biggest looming questions submitted by the audience. The duo start off by diving into the New York Giants’ potential NFL Draft plans with the 5th overall pick, how the Chicago Bears can fix their defensive line and whether or not Brian Daboll is a good fit with QB Cam Ward as the new Tennessee Titans OC.

Next, Nate & Charles discuss whether or not the Los Angeles Chargers can fix their offensive line in one offseason, if the Jacksonville Jaguars defense can take a leap next season, who the Denver Broncos should be targeting in free agency (Tyler Allgeier?) and what our expectations for the 2026 Washington Commanders should look like.

Later, the two hosts wrap up with thoughts on the New England Patriots’ upcoming offseason decisions, why Sean McVay changed to a duo run game style with the Los Angeles Rams, whether Sean McDermott was really the problem with the Buffalo Bills and more.

(2:40) - Biggest offseason questions: Giants draft plans, Bears DL, Daboll & Cam Ward

(24:30) - Biggest offseason questions: Chargers OL, Jaguars defense, Broncos, Commanders

(44:15) - Biggest offseason questions: Patriots, Rams, Bills & more

New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye (10) warms up before the NFL Super Bowl 60 football game against the Seattle Seahawks, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026, in Santa Clara, Calif. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)
New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye (10) warms up before the NFL Super Bowl 60 football game against the Seattle Seahawks, Sunday, Feb. 8, 2026, in Santa Clara, Calif. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)
(AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out all episodes of Football 301 with Nate Tice and the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

Kayshon Boutte takes shot at AFC East, claims Patriots will 'be back'

New England Patriots wide receiver Kayshon Boutte is confident in the team's ability to bounce back after their disappointing Super Bowl LX loss to the Seattle Seahawks.

Most fans didn't even expect the Patriots to make the playoffs in their first year under head coach Mike Vrabel. Yet, they defied the odds and finished the 2025 season with a 14-3 record, tying the Denver Broncos for the best record in the NFL.

They then went through the Los Angeles Chargers, Houston Texans and Broncos to win the AFC Championship and punch their ticket to the Super Bowl. Boutte uploaded a series of images to an Instagram post that simply stated, "We'll be back."

One of the images was a clear shot at the Patriots' AFC East rivals, including the New York Jets, Miami Dolphins and Buffalo Bills.

Kayshon Boutte on his IG:

😭😭😭 pic.twitter.com/nFd7Z4nj3P

— Savage (@SavageSports_) February 18, 2026

This post probably won't make fans of the other AFC East teams happy, but the Patriots earned the right to talk after winning the division.

They should also feel great about their situation in comparison to the other teams. The Jets remain a walking disaster, and the Dolphins appear to be undergoing a foundational rebuild. Meanwhile, the Bills still have Josh Allen, but they fired their head coach and promoted their struggling general manager.

The future looks bright in New England.

Follow Patriots Wire on Twitter and Facebook.

This article originally appeared on Patriots Wire: Kayshon Boutte takes shot at AFC East, claims Patriots will 'be back'

Diomande vs Mane vs Gordon: United’s hunt for a winger takes sharp turn

Diomande vs Mane vs Gordon: United’s hunt for a winger takes sharp turn
Diomande vs Mane vs Gordon: United’s hunt for a winger takes sharp turn

Manchester United’s pursuit of a new winger has taken a sharp twist with a transfer expert offering three major updates on the club’s primary targets.

Flying Wingers

The Red Devils are prioritising an overhaul of the midfield unit this summer, with Casemiro set to depart and the form of Manuel Ugarte ensuring the 24-year-old may join the Brazilian through the exit door.

However, a left-winger is also high on the agenda as the departure of Ruben Amorim – along with his ‘wingerless’ 3-4-2-1 system – has reignited the need for flying wide men at Old Trafford.

United’s first-choice option to upgrade the midfield is Nottingham Forest powerhouse Elliot Anderson, who is arguably the best midfielder not playing for a top six team in England. Brighton dynamo Carlos Baleba and Crystal Palace maestro Adam Wharton are also leading contenders.

All three players are expected to cost up to £100 million, however, with United believed to want to sign two, though cheaper alternatives on the continent are also under consideration.

This leaves little room in the budget for one of Europe’s premier wing wizards, such as RB Leipzig sensation Yan Diomande – with the German club understood to be demanding as much €100m for the Ivory Coast international.

Similarly, Newcastle and England star Anthony Gordon is another winger highly-regarded at Old Trafford, with the 24-year-old’s versatility and physicality of particular interest. He is also Premier League proven – an increasingly important trait for INEOS after the success of Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo this season.

But the Magpies would demand an exorbitant price for their prized asset, particularly if it was United who came calling, given the bad blood between the two northern rivals.

A cheaper option for the left-wing could come in the form of Wolverhampton Wanderers’ breakout star, Mateus Mane. The 18-year-old trickster has been a rare bright spot in an otherwise bleak campaign at Molineux, boasting the best dribbling metrics in the division since his debut.

The fact that Wolves are seemingly destined for relegation makes the prospect of cut-price deal far more likely – an opportunity United said to already exploring after opening talks to sign the Portuguese starlet.

Manchester United’s pursuit of a new winger has taken a dramatic turn, with a transfer expert offering three major updates on the club’s primary targets.

Flying Wingers

The Red Devils are prioritising an overhaul of the midfield unit this summer, with Casemiro set to depart and the form of Manuel Ugarte ensuring that the 24-year-old may join the Brazilian through the exit door. However, a left-winger is also high on the agenda, as the departure of Ruben Amorim – along with his ‘wingerless’ 3-4-2-1 system – has reignited the need for flying wide men at Old Trafford.

United’s first-choice option to upgrade the midfield is Nottingham Forest powerhouse Elliot Anderson, who is arguably the best midfielder not playing for a top six team in England. Brighton dynamo Carlos Baleba and Crystal Palace maestro Adam Wharton are also leading contenders.

All three players are expected to cost up to £100 million; however, United are believed to want to sign two, though cheaper alternatives on the continent are also under consideration.

This leaves little room in the budget for one of Europe’s premier wing wizards, such as RB Leipzig sensation Yan Diomande – with the German club understood to be demanding as much as €100m for the Ivory Coast international, who is enjoying a stellar debut season in the Bundesliga.

Yan Diomande Stats: 2025/26 Season

Similarly, Newcastle United and England star Anthony Gordon is another winger highly regarded at Old Trafford, with the 24-year-old’s versatility and physicality of particular interest. He is also Premier League proven – an increasingly important trait for INEOS after the success of Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo this season.

But the Magpies would demand an exorbitant price for their prized asset, particularly if it was United who came calling, given the bad blood between the two northern rivals.

A cheaper option for the left wing could come in the form of Wolverhampton Wanderers’ breakout star, Mateus Mane. The 18-year-old trickster has been a rare bright spot in an otherwise bleak campaign at Molineux, boasting the best dribbling metrics in the division since his debut.

The fact that Wolves are seemingly destined for relegation makes the prospect of a cut-price deal far more likely – an opportunity United are said to already be exploring after opening talks to sign the Portuguese starlet.

Hostile Raids

Speaking to the United Stand, Ben Jacobs firmly rejects this report, however. The talkSPORT reporter instead asserts that Mane is “not a priority target” for the Red Devils and reveals internal discussions are ongoing over a swoop on St James’ Park for Gordon.

United’s hierarchy are understood to see Newcastle United’s dismal chances of securing Champions League football next year as a catalyst to launch a hostile raid in the hope of striking a reduced fee for the England international. Jacobs states the Tyneside club may be forced into a “major sale” to balance their books, with United also closely monitoring Sandro Tonali as an option in midfield.

Jacobs also corroborates a report relayed by The Peoples Person of Diomande’s prospective asking price being slashed come the summer. He reveals figures at Old Trafford believe a price “closer to €60-70m” will be sufficient to prise the 19-year-old from Leipzig’s grasp.

Final Thoughts

If United were able to agree a drastic reduction in price for either Gordon or Diomande, the possibility of adding a top-class winger alongside two of their primary targets in midfield suddenly looks a very real possibility this summer.

A front three, for example, of Diomande, Benjamin Sesko and Mbeumo, backed up by an engine room of Anderson, Baleba and Fernandes, with players like Amad, Cunha and Kobbie Mainoo waiting in the wings, would truly be a return to the top of English football for the Red Devils.

Featured image Ben Roberts Photo via Getty Images

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The Peoples Person has been one of the world’s leading Man United news sites for over a decade. Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

Featured image Ben Roberts Photo via Getty Images

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The Peoples Person has been one of the world’s leading Man United news sites for over a decade. Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

Garcia To Start, Vinicius Jr. On The Bench | 4-4-2 Real Madrid Predicted Lineup Vs Osasuna

Garcia To Start, Vinicius Jr. On The Bench | 4-4-2 Real Madrid Predicted Lineup Vs Osasuna
Garcia To Start, Vinicius Jr. On The Bench | 4-4-2 Real Madrid Predicted Lineup Vs Osasuna

Real Madrid will lock horns with Osasuna on Saturday evening as they look to earn a win at home in La Liga. Los Blancos managed to secure a narrow 1-0 victory over Benfica in the UEFA Champions League recently, which should give them some momentum ahead of this clash.

Alvaro Arbeloa will set his players up in a 4-4-2 formation and is expected to make one change to his first team for this game. Gonzalo Garcia could play from the start of this game, while Vinicius Junior gets a rest on the bench.

4-4-2 Real Madrid Predicted Lineup To Face Osasuna

Defence

Thibaut Courtois will feature in between the sticks for Los Blancos after keeping a clean sheet in his last league appearance. Dean Huijsen will operate alongside Antonio Rudiger at the centre of the Real Madrid backline as they look to keep a good shape on the defensive end of the field.

Trent Alexander-Arnold will try to prove his worth as the right-back, while Alvaro Carreras looks to put in a good performance as the left-back. Both of them will have to pick and choose their moments to join in on the attack.

Dani Carvajal and Fran Garcia will provide cover for the full-back positions on the bench.

Real Madrid

LISBON, PORTUGAL – FEBRUARY 17: Kylian Mbappe of Real Madrid takes a throw in during the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 League Knockout Play-off First Leg match between SL Benfica and Real Madrid C.F. at Estadio do SL Benfica on February 17, 2026 in Lisbon, Portugal. (Photo by Angel Martinez/Getty Images)

Midfield

Eduardo Camavinga and Aurelien Tchouameni will operate as the holding midfielders for Los Blancos as they focus on establishing their superiority over the opposition at the centre of the park.

Arda Guler will get a chance to shine as the left-winger, while Federico Valverde hopes to produce another hard-working performance on the right flank. Both of them would try to make some overlapping runs out on the flanks.

Brahim Diaz and Dani Ceballos will make up the numbers on the bench as they await their chance to influence the game in the second 45 minutes if needed.

Attack

Kylian Mbappe and Gonzalo Garcia will lead the line for the Madrid giants in the final third. Both of them will try to get in behind the opponent’s backline at every chance they can get.

Vinicius Jr. will get a rest on the bench and might come on to make an impact in the latter stages of the game if Los Blancos are in need of a goal by then.

PREVIEW | Atlético de Madrid vs Espanyol - team news, lineups, predictions

PREVIEW | Atlético de Madrid vs Espanyol - team news, lineups, predictions
PREVIEW | Atlético de Madrid vs Espanyol - team news, lineups, predictions

Atlético de Madrid host Espanyol this Saturday at the Estadio Civitas Metropolitano on Match Day 25 of the La Liga.

Atlético de Madrid currently have 45 points and lie in 4th position. In their last outing, Diego Simeone's team drew 3-3 against Club Brugge (UEFA Champions League 2025/26).

Espanyol have 35 points to their name this season and occupy 6th position in the table. In their last fixture, Manolo González's team shared the spoils 2-2 with Celta de Vigo (La Liga 2025/26).

The last meeting between the two teams ended with Espanyol winning 2-1.

Unavailable

Atlético de Madrid

  • Nicolás González - Muscle Injury

Espanyol

Last starting XIs

Atlético de Madrid ( vs Club Brugge 2026-02-18): Jan Oblak, Nahuel Molina, David Hancko, Marc Pubill, Matteo Ruggeri, Marcos Llorente, Koke, Antoine Griezmann, Giuliano Simeone, Julián Álvarez, Ademola Lookman

Espanyol ( vs Celta de Vigo 2026-02-14): Marko Dmitrović, Omar El Hilali, Clemens Riedel, Leandro Cabrera, Carlos Romero, Pol Lozano, Edu Expósito, Cyril Ngonge, Charles Pickel, Pere Milla, Roberto Fernández

Did you know...by playmaker stats

MANAGERS

  • Diego Simeone faced Manolo González on three occasions, registering two draws and one loss
  • Manolo González faced Atlético de Madrid on three occasions, registering one win and two draws
  • Diego Simeone faced Espanyol on 24 occasions, registering 12 wins, seven draws, and five losses

TEAMS

  • Away from home, Espanyol comes from five consecutive games scoring goals.
  • Away from home, Espanyol comes from four consecutive games conceding goals.
  • Away from home, Espanyol comes from three consecutive games without a win.
  • Away from home, Espanyol comes from two consecutive losses.
  • Espanyol currently has one victory in the last eight games.
  • Espanyol comes from four consecutive games scoring goals.
  • Espanyol comes from eight consecutive games conceding goals.
  • Espanyol comes from seven consecutive games without a win.
  • At home, Atlético de Madrid currently has three losses in the last 18 games.
  • At home, Atlético de Madrid currently has one draw in the last 18 games.
  • Atlético de Madrid currently has four losses in the last 17 games.
  • Atlético de Madrid comes from two consecutive games without a win.

HEAD TO HEAD

  • Atlético de Madrid and Espanyol have faced each other 194 times, with Atlético de Madrid having the advantage: 98 wins, against 60 victories for Espanyol.
  • At the Civitas Metropolitano Stadium, Atlético de Madrid has an advantage in clashes against Espanyol: 65 wins in 95 games. Espanyol has 11 victories.
  • In the Spanish League, there have been 165 matches between the two teams, with Atlético de Madrid winning 83, 34 draws and 48 victories for Espanyol.

Aymeric Laporte claims Manchester City stars “didn’t realise” scale of success under Pep Guardiola

Aymeric Laporte claims Manchester City stars “didn’t realise” scale of success under Pep Guardiola
Aymeric Laporte claims Manchester City stars “didn’t realise” scale of success under Pep Guardiola

Former Manchester City defender Aymeric Laporte has admitted that he has only been able to realise the scale of his success at the Etihad Stadium beyond life at the club.

The 31-year-old was a cornerstone of City’s most dominant era, having joined the club in January 2018 through the activation of his then club-record £57.2 million release clause at Athletic Bilbao.

Thrust straight into action, Laporte quickly became integral to Pep Guardiola’s possession-based system thanks to his composure, distribution, and ability to progress the ball from defence.

His early months in England ended with Premier League and Carabao Cup medals, and the silverware continued to follow, as the 2018/19 campaign proved particularly memorable having featured prominently in a side that swept up every major domestic honour, even scoring a crucial header on the final day against Brighton to seal the title.

Across five-and-a-half seasons in Manchester, Laporte would lift 13 major trophies, including five Premier League titles and the club’s first UEFA Champions League crown as part of the historic 2022/23 Treble-winning side.

Now speaking during a new conversation with RMC Sport, Aymeric Laporte has reflected extensively on his time at City, and the remarkable success won with the Premier League giants, culminating in a historic Treble success.

“Honestly my Manchester City years were incredible. We didn’t realise back then, thinking it was normal, but today we realise that was exceptional,” the Spain international admitted.

He continued, “All we did and lived was magic, in spite of the ups and downs. We didn’t win all the trophies we could, we could have won a lot more, but we could have won less as well.”

“I think everyone enjoyed that time. We as players enjoyed the play style, the passion, making a Club that wasn’t the most successful grow and win a lot of titles. I won five Premier League in six years.”

Looking back on the staggering competitive rivalry with Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool in particular, Laporte said, “The atmosphere during games against Liverpool was incredible, a true rivalry.

“It was amazing to live, it was a genuine competition, we knew it was the toughest game of the season, every mistake could be detrimental, we had to be second to none to win.”

But what about some of his standout teammates from that particular iteration of Manchester City?

“Kevin de Bruyne and Sergio Aguero are wonderful, but some players like David Silva are so good. He was able to move into tight spaces, find the perfect pass and manage the tempo as well. My best centre-back teammate was Vincent Kompany,” said the 31-year-old.

Aymeric Laporte’s reflections offer a rare insight into the mentality inside Manchester City’s dressing room during one of English football’s most relentless periods of dominance.

Intense competition for places, particularly following the arrivals of Ruben Dias and the resurgence of John Stones, pushed standards even higher, while Pep Guardiola’s tactical demands ensured no complacency could creep in.

From record-breaking league campaigns to European glory, Aymeric Laporte’s time in sky blue now stands as one of the most decorated spells by a defender in the club’s history, and an era that perhaps felt routine only through how extraordinary it truly was.

Manchester City vs Newcastle: Match preview, predicted line-ups, team news, and prediction

Manchester City vs Newcastle: Match preview, predicted line-ups, team news, and prediction
Manchester City vs Newcastle: Match preview, predicted line-ups, team news, and prediction

Manchester City host Newcastle United at the Etihad Stadium in Saturday’s Premier League late kick-off.

City beat Fulham 3-0 at home in their last league fixture, keeping them hot on the heels of leaders Arsenal.

Newcastle recorded a 2-1 win at Tottenham Hotspur, ending their four-game winless league run.

Match preview

Man City beat Salford City 2-0 in the FA Cup last weekend, extending their unbeaten run to seven matches across all competitions.

The Cityzens have picked up 11 points in their last six league games — only three teams have managed more within that period.

City have faced Newcastle three times this season, winning two and losing one. On both occasions they won, City relied on clinical finishing rather than outright dominance.

City boast the joint-best home record in the league and will be aiming to continue their impressive home form here. A victory takes them one point adrift of Arsenal.

Newcastle thrashed Qarabag 6-1 in the Champions League knockout play-off, recording their fourth consecutive away victory across all competitions.

While they have lost to City twice already this season, they have been let down by poor decision-making at both ends, not by a lack of competitiveness.

The Magpies will try to exploit City’s high defensive line and maintain a compact defensive shape without possession.

Newcastle have lost their last 12 games at City and will be hoping to end that in Saturday’s showdown.

Team news

Man City’s Josko Gvardiol and Mateo Kovacic remain sidelined with injuries, while Jeremy Doku and Savinho are doubts.

As for Newcastle, Bruno Guimaraes, Tino Livramento, Fabian Schar, and Emil Krafth are on the treatment table. Lewis Miley, Sven Botman, and Yoanne Wissa are doubtful.

Predicted line-ups

Man City (4-2-3-1): Gianluigi Donnarumma, Rayan Ait-Nouri, Marc Guehi, Ruben Dias, Matheus Nunes, Nico O’Reilly, Rodri, Antoine Semenyo, Bernardo Silva, Rayan Cherki, Erling Braut Haaland.

Newcastle (4-2-3-1): Nick Pope, Lewis Hall, Dan Burn, Malick Thiaw, Kieran Trippier, Sandro Tonali, Joe Willock, Antony Elanga, Nick Woltemade, Harvey Barnes, Antony Gordon.

Prediction

We predict a 3-2 victory for Man City.

Stats from whoscored.com

Bianconere’s UWCL campaign ends at home to Wolfsburg

Bianconere’s UWCL campaign ends at home to Wolfsburg
Bianconere’s UWCL campaign ends at home to Wolfsburg

The Juventus Women’s First Team’s European campaign came to an end on Thursday evening, with Wolfsburg scoring twice without response to claim a second-leg win in the Women’s Champions League’s playoff round. The first leg in Germany had finished 2-2.

THE MATCH REPORT

The game began well for the Bianconere, who looked to attack from the first whistle. Inside two minutes, Barbara Bonansea went close but her effort was saved without too much fuss. Chiara Beccari also tried her luck before the quarter-of-an-hour mark, having been well set up by Eva Schatzer, but again had no success.

Wolfsburg struck in the 18th minute though. A swift counterattack ended with Vivien Endemann through to face Danielle de Jong and she made no mistake in finishing past the Dutch goalkeeper.

Both Bonansea and Beccari were again involved as the Bianconere looked to level. The former teed up Cecilia Salvai, who couldn’t finish, and Beccari then found Martina Lenzini, but she was equally unsuccessful. 

Coming out for the second half in need of a goal, Salvai and Emma Stolen Godo led the charge, but again were unable to find the target. 

The Bianconere’s biggest chance came before the hour mark. A chaotic few seconds in the box saw the ball fall behind Ana Capeta and she showed great improvisation in attempting an overhead kick, which unfortunately came back off the crossbar. 

Ex-Bianconera Lineth Beerensteyn came close to a second on the end of another counterattack, but the hosts had gained some control over the game and Amalie Vangsgaard forced a good save from Stina Johannes after a Cristiana Girelli cross. 

Johannes was again alert to pull off a great save from Paulina Krumbiegel in the dying minutes.

There was time, just, for Wolfsburg to score a second with the final kick of the game through Cora Zicai, again after a quick counterattack.

Gallery | UEFA Women's Champions League | Juventus-Wolfsburg

Latest update on Aaron Rodgers spells bad news for the Steelers

Those Steelers fans hoping to see a reunion between Mike McCarthy and Aaron Rodgers in 2026 might not want to hold their breath, according to new reports.

This week, NFL insider Aditi Kinkhabwala stopped by 93.7 The Fan in Pittsburgh, and during her appearance on the show, she disclosed that many sources around Aaron Rodgers – who served as the starting quarterback for the Steelers last season on a one-year deal – don't foresee the legendary quarterback returning to the Steel City in 2026.

“Great NFL insider Aditi Kinkhabwala says on 93. 7 The Fan that people around Aaron Rodgers believe there’s a ‘minuscule chance’ he’s back with the Steelers in 2026,” said Andrew Fillipponi, who serves as a host with 93.7, on X. “And that’s Rodgers decision. Not the Steelers. Based on what they observed at the end of last season.”

Great NFL insider @AKinkhabwala says on @937theFan that people around Aaron Rodgers believe there's a "minuscule chance" he's back with the Steelers in 2026. And that's Rodgers decision. Not the Steelers. Based on what they observed at the end of last season.

!!! pic.twitter.com/up4RZ2jYKJ

— Andrew Fillipponi (@ThePoniExpress) February 18, 2026

Rodgers just wrapped up his 21st season in the league, and his first season with the Pittsburgh Steelers. He finished the year with his best completion percentage (65.7%) since the 2021 season, and passed for 3,322 yards, 24 touchdowns, and seven interceptions during the regular season.

Reports indicated that, following the season's end, Rodgers had no interest in returning to the Steelers, but that was before the hiring of new head coach Mike McCarthy. McCarthy was the head coach for much of the gunslinger's tenure with the Green Bay Packers, and the duo captured Super Bowl XLV for the Packers in 2010.

This article originally appeared on Touchdown Wire: Latest update on Aaron Rodgers spells bad news for the Steelers

Tom Brady, Billie Jean King in attendance for USA-Canada women's hockey game

Tom Brady is looking to watch some history at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Thursday.

The seven-time Super Bowl champion is in attendance inside Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena for Thursday's women's hockey gold medal game between the United States and Canada, where he's taking the game in with a few legends in Billie Jean King and Mark Messier.

"Cheering on the incredible talent in Women's Hockey Gold Medal Game with some friends who know a thing or two about sports," Billie Jean King wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

Cheering on the incredible talent in the Women's Hockey Gold Medal Game with some friends who know a thing or two about sports.#Olympics2026@TomBradypic.twitter.com/8SEkKamD0e

— Billie Jean King (@BillieJeanKing) February 19, 2026

REQUIRED READING: USA faces Canada for Olympic women's hockey gold medal: Live updates

Brady was also shown on NBC's broadcast during the second period in a suite box talking to Mike Eruzione, the captain of the USA men's hockey "Miracle on Ice" team that beat the Soviet Union on their way to an Olympic gold medal at the 1980 Lake Placid Winter Olympics.

Thursday's women's hockey game is the second known event that the former New England Patriot and Tampa Bay Buccaneer quarterback has been spotted at during the 2026 Winter Olympics, as he was at figure skating earlier in the Winter Games.

Brady is one of several "decorated athletes" who reached out to U.S. figure skating star Illia Malinin after the "Quad God" lost out on an Olympic medal in the men's singles event following a disappointing and disastrous free skate performance.

The United States is currently trailing 1-0 after the second period in Thursday's medal game, at the time of this writing. Team USA is looking to win its third Olympic gold medal in history, and second since the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang.

The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fastDownload for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tom Brady at US women's hockey gold medal game with Billie Jean King

Pereira sparks Nottingham Forest to a 3-0 win at Fenerbahçe in the Europa League playoff

Vítor Pereira made an impact in his first game in charge, leading Nottingham Forest to a 3-0 victory at Fenerbahçe in the first leg of their Europa League playoff on Thursday.

Defender Murillo, forward Igor Jesus and captain Morgan Gibbs-White scored a goal apiece to put Forest in command ahead of the second leg at the City Ground.

In Thessaloniki, PAOK was beaten 2-1 by Celta Vigo on goals from Iago Aspas and Williot Swedberg in a rematch of the Greek side’s 3-1 loss to the Spanish team in the league phase.

Zakaria El Ouahdi scored twice and Bryan Heynen added one for visiting Genk in a 3-1 victory against Dinamo in Zagreb.

In Norway, Argentine forward Santiago Castro scored the winner for Bologna from a tight angle to secure a 1-0 victory over Brann.

Among late games, Celtic was in action against Stuttgart and Lille faced Red Star Belgrade.

Like in the Champions League, the top eight finishers in the league phase advanced automatically to the last 16. The teams placed from nine to 24 entered a two-leg playoff.

The second leg is scheduled for next Thursday.

Pereira’s promising debut

Pereira became struggling Nottingham Forest’s fourth coach of a turbulent season only on Sunday, replacing Sean Dyche, who was fired after being in charge for just 114 days.

This was his first game in charge ahead of hosting defending champion Liverpool on Sunday as Forest is 17th in the Premier League and one place above the relegation zone.

Murillo received a pass from Elliot Anderson and unleashed a fierce shot from outside the area which slightly deflected off defender Milan Škriniar before finding the bottom right corner of the net in the 21st.

Jesus doubled the lead with a header shortly before halftime off a corner kick with his seventh goal of the campaign.

The Brazil forward then set up the third in the second half for Gibbs-White.

Pereira is in his second coaching job of the season. In November, he was fired by Wolverhampton Wanderers after a winless start to the Premier League season.

Crystal Palace held

Crystal Palace had to settle for a 1-1 draw away at Zrinjski Mostar in Bosnia in the third-tier Conference League. Ismaïla Sarr gave the Premier League side a 1-0 lead but Karlo Abramović salvaged a draw for the Bosnian champion.

___

AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

See the Most Heartwarming Moments of Athletes Celebrating with Their Children at the 2026 Winter Olympics

Erich Schlegel/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

Erich Schlegel/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

The next generation of Olympians is already making headlines.

At the 2026 Winter Olympics, family members from all over the world have flown in to cheer on their athlete parents as they take to the snow and ice — even the little ones. Several kids have created some "aww"-inducing moments with their antics in the stands or in the arms of their parents.

Ahead, see the sweetest family moments throughout the winter games.

01 of 08

Yannick Schwaller and Briar Schwaller-Huerlimann with Son River

Yannick Schwaller, Briar Schwaller-Huerlimann and their son River JEAN-CHRISTOPHE BOTT/EPA/Shutterstock
Yannick Schwaller, Briar Schwaller-Huerlimann and their son River

JEAN-CHRISTOPHE BOTT/EPA/Shutterstock

Curling mixed doubles pair Yannick Schwaller and Briar Schwaller-Huerlimann's son River went viral after he picked up his mother's broom.

"I got my son after the game, cuddled him, he wanted to get down pretty quickly. He saw the curling broom, took it and held it like a rock star and threw off the whole entire show," Schwaller Huerlimann told Reuters. "I guess he's known as the curling baby now!"

02 of 08

Elana Meyers Taylor with Her Son

Elana Meyers Taylor Julian Finney/Getty
Elana Meyers Taylor

Julian Finney/Getty

Following her gold medal win in women's monobob, making her the oldest victor in any Winter Olympics individual event as well as tied (with Bonnie Blair) for the most-decorated U.S. female winter Olympian, Elana Meyers Taylor signed "Mommy won!" to her sons Nico, 5, and Noah, 3, who are both deaf.

"They're tired, and they're exhausted, and they just want to go home and play and everything like that — even tonight, it was a late night for them, so just having them there meant so much to me,” the Olympian told NBC.

Parents everywhere also cheered when Meyers Taylor thanked her entire support system — and that included the childcare that helped her achieve the gold. “It took so many people to be here,” she said tearfully. “It took so much work for everybody. My husband. My kids. My nanny Macy. My nannies along the way. My parents. Everybody. I’m just so grateful right now.”

03 of 08

Kaillie Armbruster Humphries with Her Son Aulden

Kaillie Armbruster Humphries Al Bello/Getty
Kaillie Armbruster Humphries

Al Bello/Getty

Meyers Taylor's fellow Team USA bobsledder Kaillie Humphries also had her son Aulden, 20 months, on hand o celebrate her bronze medal.

"Having my son, having that side of my goals and dreams complete, being able to be a mom, just gives me this whole other superpower," she told NBC ahead of the games.

04 of 08

Francesca Lollobrigida with Her Son

Francesca Lollobrigida and her son Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty
Francesca Lollobrigida and her son

Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty

Italy's Francesca Lollobrigida shared her record-breaking gold medal win with her two-year-old son Tommaso, who later interrupted her post-race interview in a clip that has since garnered 3.5 million views on X.

“It’s not that easy to combine being a skater and a mom," the Olympic speed skater said in the interview, as Tommaso attempted to grab her mic and her medal, per The Athletic. “This (medal) is for myself, the people who believed in me, and the people who said, ‘Maybe she can’t do it, you know?’ They gave me the power to prove myself,” she added.

05 of 08

Mikael Kingsbury, Ikuma Horishima and Matt Graham with Their Families

Mikael Kingsbury, Ikuma Horishima, Matt Graham and their family members Hannah Peters/Getty
Mikael Kingsbury, Ikuma Horishima, Matt Graham and their family members

Hannah Peters/Getty

Three dads stood on the podium of the men's dual moguls competition: Canada's Mikael Kingsbury, Japan's Ikuma Horishima and Australia's Matt Graham. The medalists came together for a group photo with their babies and partners.

06 of 08

Caroline Ouellette with Her Wife Julie and Daughters

Caroline Ouellette with her wife Julie Chu and daughters Caroline Ouellette/Instagram
Caroline Ouellette with her wife Julie Chu and daughters

Caroline Ouellette/Instagram

Ahead of their match against Team USA in the final, Canadian hockey coach Caroline Ouellette (a multiple-time Olympic medalist for Team Canada) received a visit in Milan from her wife, former hockey player Julie Chu (herself an Olympic medalist for Team USA), and their two daughters, Liv, 8, and Tessa, 5.

07 of 08

Kendall Coyne Schofield with Her Son

NBC Olympics & Paralympics/X.com

NBC Olympics & Paralympics/X.com

Before Team USA's match against Sweden, Kendall Coyne Schofield shared a touching moment with her son Drew. Earlier in the week, Drew became known as "puck kid" after he caught a puck that flew into the stands.

08 of 08

Sarah Schleper with Lasse Gaxiola

Sarah Schleper and Lasse Gaxiola IOC via Getty (2)
Sarah Schleper and Lasse Gaxiola

IOC via Getty (2)

Eighteen-year-old Lasse Gaxiola made his Olympic debut as an alpine ski racer, representing Team Mexico alongside his mother, seven-time Olympian Sarah Schleper. They are the first mother-son duo in Olympics history to compete in the same year.

Though Schleper finished last in the women's super-G, she told reporters, per NBC: “Racing with your son, I guess that’s better than a gold medal.”

Read the original article on People

Dolphins look to trade All-Pro safety: Exploring possible destinations

On Wednesday, the news was revealed that the Miami Dolphins have had discussions with a number of other NFL teams about a possible trade for three-time All-Pro safety Minkah Fitzpatrick, and that they are willing to ship him off to a new home for the right price.

Fitzpatrick, who finished last season with 82 tackles, six pass deflections, and one interception, will surely be a hot commodity if the Dolphins are set to move him. Let's take a look at a few possible destinations for the star safety.

BREAKING: The Dolphins have had trade talks with teams about All-Pro S Minkah Fitzpatrick and are willing to move him for the right price 🚨

Fitzpatrick, 29, recorded 82 total tackles, 59 solo, 1 INT, 1 FF, and 2 FR and 6 PBUs this season.

(via @Schultz_Report) pic.twitter.com/hdxuq48ZjS

— Football Forever (@fballforeverhq) February 18, 2026

Potential trade destinations for Minkah Fitzpatrick

Dallas Cowboys - Before the Cowboys acquired Quinnen Williams and Logan Wilson for their defense last year, they were very interested in trading for Fitzpatrick. Now, another opportunity has arisen. Cornerback is a higher priority than safety for Dallas at the moment, but their safety room could also use work. Financials would be a problem if Fitzpatrick was a free agent, but a trade could make it work.

Chicago Bears - The Bears are set to see Jaquan Brisker and Kevin Byard become unrestricted free agents this offseason, and the franchise will likely only be able to retain one. Even with both, the secondary could use an elite veteran presence like Fitzpatrick if they want to take the next step towards an NFC Championship contender, and he could be the first move towards solidifying the Bears' defense.

Kansas City Chiefs - The Chiefs took a massive hit last offseason, losing Justin Reid, and are set to lose another veteran, Bryan Cook, this year. The position group is at its weakest in years for the franchise, and they are expected to target Caleb Downs in the NFL Draft this year, potentially. But the boost provided by a player like Fitzpatrick would be invaluable as the Chiefs look to return to the playoffs after missing the postseason for the first time in over a decade.

This article originally appeared on Touchdown Wire: Dolphins look to trade All-Pro safety: Exploring possible destinations

Jordan Stolz didn't lose his third Olympic gold. He got beat for it

MILAN — Jordan Stolz had us spoiled.

By cruising to Olympic gold in the 500 meters and 1,000 meters, setting Olympic records in the process, he made this quest for history at the 2026 Winter Olympics look easy. Of course he could win the 1,500 meters and then the mass start, giving him four golds at a single Games, something no one but Eric Heiden has done.

But this was never going to be easy. It's not supposed to be. 

"I think two gold medals in itself is already a huge accomplishment, and silver's not bad," Stolz said after finishing second to China's Ning Zhongyan, who blazed to gold in an Olympic record 1:41.98. "To be able to have three medals is super cool.

"The pressure, with expecting four gold medals, that's not something I was thinking about too much. I was just focusing on my races and what I could do and what I could control. Today Ning had the better race. He was super good. I couldn't beat him."

Stolz had been unbeatable at the 1,500 meters this season, winning all five World Cup races. But that doesn't get you a head start at the Olympics. You don't get a couple of seconds shaved off your time because you won the World Cup season title.

Stolz has been the guy everyone wants to beat for three years now. While he was focusing on his own races, everyone else was focusing on him. The thought of him was what drove his competitors do that extra training session, to spend that extra hour in the gym.

It is one thing to win an Olympic gold medal. It's even better when you can do it by taking down the best of the best.

"I was never expecting that I could win the gold medal today. During the whole season, I never beat Jordan," Ning said, incredulous. "I still can’t believe I won the race today. After he finished his race, I couldn’t believe that I beat him. I was finally on top of the mountain."

And make no mistake, Stolz did not lose this race. Ning won it.

Skating two pairs before Stolz and matched with Kjeld Nuis, the defending Olympic champion and world record holder, Ning made his way around the rink as if he was powered by rocket fuel. He did his first lap in 22.99, a blistering pace.

When he finished, he'd eclipsed an Olympic record that was all of about five minutes old, set by Joep Wennemars of the Netherlands.

Stolz thought he could beat Ning, but only if he had a perfect race. When he saw he'd done a 25.4 in his first lap, however, he knew beating Ning was going to be "pretty difficult." Stolz was able to make up some ground, shaving almost 0.6 seconds off the gap in the last lap.

But it wasn't enough.

"I started to die off a little bit. I just couldn’t hold it to the finish to beat his time," Stolz said. "Maybe I could do better than that time on my best day. I think Ning had the race of his life, and he definitely earned it today."

That's how the Olympics goes. The best people don't always win. Often enough, as Stolz did in the 500 meters and the 1,000 meters. But time and again at these Games alone we've seen the favorite hasn't been the one standing atop the podium, for a variety of reasons.

For Stolz to maintain his peak for four races over a 10-day span, to hold off the pack at four different distances, well, there's a reason no one's come close to doing what Heiden did at the 1980 Olympics in Lake Placid, when he won five golds.

"It probably will never happen again," Stolz said. "I mean, five gold medals is insane."

And it's not because of the pressure.

Because he's been so dominant and because of the possibility of winning four golds, Stolz is one of the faces of these Games. He's in commercials and now has a laundry list of sponsors. But if there's anyone built to be impervious to that kind of pressure, it's Stolz.

Though he is only 21, he is about as even-keeled as they come. The next time he's ruffled will be the first.

Was he disappointed not to win? Of course. He's human, and he had to choke back some emotions as he stood on the medals podium.

But he is also sensible enough to know why he didn't win. And to be happy for Ning that he did.

"He tries really hard. He's always trying to be on the podium and now he was able to win, so that's super cool for him," Stolz said.

To think Stolz was going to waltz off with four gold medals wasn't just naive, it did a disservice to his competitors.

Ning, Stolz, Nuis and Wennemars — they all skated faster than the time Nuis did four years ago in setting what had been the Olympic record when the night began. This wasn't just a race, it was a heavyweight fight. Nine times out of 10, Stolz would win it.

But that's what makes the Olympics so compelling. Nothing is going to come easy, even for Jordan Stolz.

Get our Chasing Gold Olympics newsletter in your inbox for coverage of your favorite Team USA athletes

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jordan Stolz's silver reminder Olympics aren't supposed to be easy

Michelob Ultra El Paso Marathon 2026: Registration, course, what to know

The Michelob Ultra El Paso Marathon, the Raiz Federal Credit Union Half Marathon and the Spine & Rehab Specialists 5K Run/Walk seem to be in a continuous growth phase, to the point where the El Paso running community's biggest event is about as large as Downtown can handle.

This year, that will mean an estimated 7,000 runners spread across the three races, up from 4,600 last year. The new twist is that the marathon will start and finish at San Jacinto Plaza, where the half-marathon and 5K fun run start and finish.

More: Michelob Ultra El Paso Marathon 2025 crowns champions on perfect day in the Sun City

Medals for the Michelob Ultra Marathon include a different letter each year so finishers can eventually spell out E-L-P-A-S-O. The 2026 race features the letter 'P'.

Last year, the marathon started at the Eastside Athletic Complex. The three years before that (2022-24), all the races ended at the El Paso Coliseum. This gets the race back to where it began in 2007, when it started and finished at San Jacinto Plaza.

This year, it will be much easier for marathoners to reach the start for the 7 a.m. launch.

More: Michelob Ultra El Paso Marathon 2025 crowns champions on perfect day in the Sun City

Derek Weber is the first man to cross the finish line in the Michelob Ultra El Paso Marathon on Feb. 23, 2025.

"That's a huge thing, everybody is going to start and finish at the same place rather than us doing a point-to-point for the marathon," race director Mike Coulter said. "This year, the marathon is at 250 more than we've ever had. That's huge, we're not sure what to attribute that to, but it's a real positive thing for us."

There is an expected field of 825 for the marathon (down from 547 last year), 2,700 for the half (down from almost 2,000 last year), and roughly 3,400 for the 5K fun run.

While the marathon and half marathon will sell out there are ample spots remaining for the 5K fun run.

This will be the third year the marathon has rewarded finishers with a medal in the shape of a letter, forming a complete set spelling E-L-P-A-S-O. In this third year, this medal will feature the letter P.

More: 56-year-old El Paso teacher finds joy in running, aims to finish El Paso half marathon

Coulter feels the distinctive medals are catching on and have led to an increase in popularity.

"That's some of it. They saw the first two years and they are responding to it. It's giving us an increase."

Here is what to know about the races.

When is the 2026 El Paso Marathon?

The three races are on Sunday, Feb. 22. The Michelob Ultra El Paso Marathon begins at 7 a.m., the Raiz Federal Credit Union Half Marathon begins at 7:20 a.m., and the Spine & Rehab Specialists 5K Run/Walk begins at 7:40 a.m. All races begin and end at San Jacinto Plaza.

How to register for El Paso Marathon

The marathon and half marathon will be full but the Spine & Rehab Specialists 5K Run/Walk still has about 1,000 spots available. Online registration is open until Saturday, Feb. 21.

How much is the El Paso Marathon?

The El Paso Marathon costs $140 and the Spine & Rehab Specials 5K Run/Walk costs $45. The half marathon cost $115, but it's sold out. Registration is online.

When is packet pick-up?

Runners can pick up their packet with their number, timing chip and T-shirt from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 21, at the convention center in Downtown. This will be concurrent with the Sarah Farms Health & Fitness Expo. There is no race-day registration or packet pickup.

What is the course?

The marathon begins at San Jacinto Plaza and heads east past McRae Boulevard to Wedgewood Drive, just before Eastwood Park. The race then heads back west to return to San Jacinto Plaza.

A full map is here.

The half marathon follows a similar course before turning around at Raynolds Street near Loretto Academy.

The full map for the half marathon is here.

The 5K fun run starts west, approaches Southwest University Park, then turns back east, crosses downtown, and turns around again on Brown Street before heading back to San Jacinto Plaza.

Drivers in affected areas should count on road closures from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m.

What is the El Paso Marathon cutoff?

There is a strict six-hour cutoff. The course closes at 1 p.m. Anyone still on the course will be picked up and taken back to San Jacinto Plaza.

What else to know about El Paso Marathon

The event has an FAQ on its website with more information, including details on clothing drops.

Bret Bloomquist can be reached at bbloomquist@elpasotimes.com; @Bretbloomquist on Twitter.

This article originally appeared on El Paso Times: El Paso Marathon 2026: Start, course, registration, and more

Amber Glenn Has the Redemption Skate She Needed After Struggling in Short Program at 2026 Winter Olympics

Amber Glenn after her performance on Feb. 19, 2026 at the Winter Olympics. Jamie Squire/Getty
Amber Glenn after her performance on Feb. 19, 2026 at the Winter Olympics.

Jamie Squire/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Amber Glenn scored a redemptive 147.52 in her free skate in the women's final on Feb. 19
  • Glenn pumped her fist with pride after finishing her performance
  • The figure skater bounced back from a disappointing short program performance

Amber Glenn bounced back from a disappointing short program with a confident, redemptive free skate in the women's skating finals at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Glenn, 26, broke down in tears upon finishing her short program on Feb. 17, as she failed to complete her triple axel, a required element. But two days later, she put her best foot forward, scoring an impressive 147.52 and putting her in first place at the Milano Ice Skating Arena in Italy on Thursday, Feb. 19.

Glenn was pleased with herself upon completing her performance, as she pumped her fist with pride before skating off into the kiss and cry. As she awaited her score, she shared a message to "everyone at home."

"Thank you for staying with me, believing in me," she told the camera. "I love you, and I'm gonna keep saying what I need to say."

Amber Glenn reacts upon hearing her score at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Feb. 19. Antonin THUILLIER / AFP via Getty
Amber Glenn reacts upon hearing her score at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Feb. 19.

Antonin THUILLIER / AFP via Getty

She also told the audience that she "didn't fall at the Olympics."

Glenn is currently sitting in first place with 12 skaters to go, and will wait to see if she has a shot at a medal.

After Glenn's skate in the short program, the athlete took to social media to tell fans she was "coping well" in the aftermath.

"Landing my highest scoring 3Axel,” she wrote over a video that featured herself celebrating, then quickly switching up her mood to frustration. “Messing up the last jump and getting it invalidated.”

“I'm coping well thanks for asking 🤪” Glenn captioned the TikTok.

She also shared an adorable image of a dog wearing a baseball cap with an inspirational message to her Instagram Stories after her first skate.

“The world has ended for me many times and yet tomorrow still comes. Keep going,” the post read.

Glenn previously won a gold medal earlier in the Games as part of the team skating event alongside teammates like Alysa Liu and Ilia Malinin.

Amber Glenn leaves her emotions on the ice after her short program at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Feb. 17, 2026. Xue Yuge/Xinhua via Getty
Amber Glenn leaves her emotions on the ice after her short program at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Feb. 17, 2026.

Xue Yuge/Xinhua via Getty

Malinin, 21, was in the audience during the short program, and one day later, he told PEOPLE he spoke to Glenn afterward to offer some words of support. "I've told her that, you know, this is something that we all go through," said Malinin, who also came up short of expectations in the single skate on Feb. 13.

"It's, you know, it's not always a pleasant feeling," Malinin continued, "but it's something that we need to embrace and we have to move on from no matter what, because no matter what happens, we always have to get up and go do it again."

Liu, 20, watched Glenn's first skate from the media mixed zone on Feb. 17 and spoke to reporters about her teammate, saying, “She’s gone through so much and she works so friggen’ hard, like genuinely, such a hard worker and she’s overcome a lot. I just want her to be happy. That’s genuinely all I want. And so I’ll be seeing her later, don’t worry guys. We’ll stick together.”

To learn more about all the Olympic and Paralympic hopefuls, come to people.com to check out ongoing coverage before, during and after the games. Watch the Milan Cortina Olympics and Paralympics, beginning Feb. 6, on NBC and Peacock.

Read the original article on People

Submit your offseason mailbag questions!

Rob Leonard
Aug 23, 2025; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Las Vegas Raiders defensive line coach Rob Leonard against the Arizona Cardinals during a preseason NFL game at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

Klint Kubiak has been busy this week filling out his first coaching staff with the Las Vegas Raiders, and has people in place for all three coordinator positions by hiring Andrew Janocko (offense) and Joe DeCamillis (special teams) while promoting Rob Leonard (defense). Kubiak has also hired a few position coaches, the NFL’s franchise tag window opened on Tuesday and the combine is next week, giving us plenty to talk about for this week’s mailbag.

As always, anything Raiders-related is on the table and fire away with anything that’s on your mind. Send your questions my way by either dropping a comment in the comments section below, tweeting at me (@MHolder95) or via email at SBPQuestions1@gmail.com. I’ll follow up with another column in the coming days.

If you don’t have a commenting account already, you’ll need to create one but the steps are pretty easy and it’s a seamless process. Also, we have full-time moderators to enforce the Community Guidelines. 

2026 Premier League Darts Night 3 Glasgow live results, scores and schedule: Littler held to just 1 leg in stunning loss against Clayton

Luke Littler

2026 Premier League Darts Night 3 Glasgow live results, scores and schedule: Littler held to just 1 leg in stunning loss against Clayton originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Luke Littler couldn't quite find his groove against Jonny Clayton, hitting doubles at a rate of 16% in the 1-6 loss.

Night 3 of the 2026 Premier League of Darts takes place in Glasgow, one of two cities in Scotland that host a PL week this year.

Unfortunately, we won't see Michael van Gerwen take on Luke Littler in the quarterfinals, as he was forced to withdraw due to illness, but we have six exciting games still to be played on Thursday.

2026 Premier League Darts Night 3 results, scores and schedule

Here is the schedule and the results from Night 3 of the 2026 PL.

MORE: 2026 Premier League Darts Night 3 draw, match predictions and 3 storylines to watch in Glasgow

Quarterfinals

MatchTime (local)Score
Stephen Bunting vs Gian van Veen7:15 p.m.3-6
Luke Humphries vs Josh Rock7:50 p.m.6-2
Michael van Gerwen vs Luke Littler8:15 p.m.N/A (w/o)
Jonny Clayton vs Gerwyn Price8:25 p.m.6-3

MORE: 2026 Premier League Darts schedule, scores, results and updated table

Semifinals

MatchTime (local)Score
Gian van Veen vs. Luke Humphries9:00 p.m.6-5
Luke Littler vs. Jonny Clayton9:35 p.m.1-6

MORE: 2026 Premier League Darts prize money explained

Final

MatchTime (local)Score
Gian van Veen vs. Jonny Clayton10:15 p.m.

More darts articles:

Pistons urged to steal Lakers' $53 million breakout star, NBA Cup champion

Pistons urged to steal Lakers' $53 million breakout star, NBA Cup champion originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Despite losing sharpshooting wing Malik Beasley in the offseason, the Detroit Pistons have successfully built on the successful 2024-25 campaign. 

The Pistons, led by star point guard Cade Cunningham, boast a 40-13 record, which is best in the Eastern Conference through 53 games. If Detroit doesn’t perform well under the bright lights, though, they’ll likely look to make significant adjustments to the roster in the offseason.

Piston Powered’s Aaron Kellerstrass believes that one of the adjustments could be stealing the Los Angeles Lakers’ 6-foot-5 breakout star and NBA Cup champion.

“(Austin) Reaves has averaged 25 points and six assists this season on strong shooting splits, so he’d be a nice fit,” Kellerstrass wrote Thursday.

“Getting him is a different story, though, as Reaves will be seeking a max deal that pays upwards of $35-40 million per season. The Pistons aren’t likely to have that kind of cap space to use, and even if they did, they would have to think twice about it with Ausar Thompson due for a raise in the offseason after this one.”

“It would take some roster moves for the Pistons to pull it off, so it’s a long shot, but one that can’t be ruled out, especially if Trajan Langdon decides another scorer is the final piece to winning a title.”

Things could get interesting if Reaves declines his $14 million player option in free agency. The Pistons are definitely a franchise that could appeal to the Oklahoma product. 

Like the Lakers, the Pistons have an established point guard who has proven he deserves high praise (Cunningham is averaging 25.3 points, 9.6 assists, and 5.6 rebounds per game this season). 

The Pistons also have a solid foundation and are trending upward after finishing with an abysmal 14-68 record in 2023-24. Adding Reaves, a dynamic ball-handler and shot creator, would almost certainly put Detroit over the top and give them every reason to be excited about the foreseeable future.

At the end of the day, it’ll all depend on which direction Reaves goes in with his player option.

More NBA: Lakers urged to finally cut ties with $101 million four-time NBA champion, 22-time All-Star

Is England on course for fifth Champions League spot?

General view inside the stadium of the official adidas match day ball prior to a UEFA Champions League game
The Premier League is in a dominant position for the extra places in the Champions League and Europa League [Getty Images]

With the knockout phase of all three European competitions having started this week, how is the race for the extra places in the Champions League shaping up?

The two nations which perform best across the Champions League, Europa League and Conference League this season will be handed European Performance Spots (EPS) by Uefa.

That means fifth place in the Premier League table could go from being a Europa League place to a ticket into the Champions League - Newcastle benefited this way last season.

But will an English club get that reward again?

How do European Performance Spots work?

To work out who are the successful nations, Uefa takes into consideration the overall performance of clubs in the Champions League, Europa League and Conference League.

It creates an average by taking the total coefficient score and dividing it by the number of clubs each league has in European competition.

So, the Premier League has a total score of 188.625 this season. Divide that by nine clubs and you get an average of 20.958.

The top two leaguesin the table get an extra place in the Champions League.

Each win - regardless of the competition - is worth two coefficient points, with a draw worth one.

The key differential is in bonus points awarded based on clubs' finishing positions in the league phase and knockout rounds, as these are much higher in the Champions League.

By way of an example, the teams that finish 25th-36th in the Champions League got six bonus points - even though they were eliminated.

Yet the team who finished top of the Conference League table - Strasbourg - received just four points.

Bonus points for progressing through the knockout rounds are also weighted. In the Champions League it is 1.5, Europa League 1, and Conference League 0.5.

This means it is almost certain that one of the top European leagues will get the extra places each season because they have more clubs in the Champions League.

With all bonus points now dished out, the table is taking shape.

What does the table look like?

ENGLAND

England is the only country to still have all teams active - and there are nine of them.

It will be very hard for England to throw it away after bagging 72.50 bonus points from the Champions League final placings.

But nothing should be completely taken for granted, as England seemed destined to get an EPS slot in 2023-24 only to suffer a terrible set of results in the quarter-finals.

England can consolidate its position with results in the knockout play-off rounds. It has three teams active, while only Italy (five) of the major European leagues has more.

Newcastle are well-placed to make the last 16 of the Champions League after winning 6-1 at Qarabag.

Nottingham Forest are in a strong position after winning 3-0 at Fenerbache, while Crystal Palace drew 1-1 away to Zrinjski Mostar.

As a picture of how far England is ahead, Portuguese clubs are effectively 13 wins behind, for German sides it is 17 wins. Then for the Italian teams it is 20 victories and for the Spanish clubs 22.

GERMANY

Only Eintracht Frankfurt have been eliminated, so the Bundesliga is well placed to take an EPS slot alongside England.

Borussia Dortmund beat Atalanta in the Champions League knockout play-off round first leg. Bayer Leverkusen won 2-0 at Olympiakos, and that took Germany back into second place.

Stuttgart could pick up more coefficient points on Thursday.

Germany's chances are hampered by the bracket. If Leverkusen and Dortmund get through one of them must meet Bayern Munich in the last 16.

PORTUGAL

Portugal did not seem to really stand a realistic chance of making the top two after Santa Clara were knocked out out of the Conference League in the qualifying rounds.

Still, it moves into the knockouts with four teams active but will need all to go very deep to have any chance.

Only Benfica can add coefficient points in February and they lost the first leg at home to Real Madrid in the Champions League.

Even if Benfica pull off another surprise and knock out the La Liga giants, Portugal is likely to drop down the table. Other leagues have more teams in action.

SPAIN

With eight teams in Europe, Spain needed to have a strong campaign.

Chances were severely damaged by Villarreal and Athletic Club's Champions League elimination.

While Spain have six teams still active, each win is worth less to the coefficient than those of their rivals for second place.

La Liga does have three teams in action in February: Atletico Madrid, Real Madrid and Celta Vigo.

Real Madrid won away to Benfica to put themselves into a strong position for the last 16 and Atletico Madrid drew at Club Brugge, while Celta Vigo won 2-1 away to PAOK.

ITALY

Serie A had a slow start but it remains in contention despite losing Napoli from the Champions League.

With Italy having five teams in action in February there is the potential to significantly boost its score.

However, Atalanta, Juventus and Inter Milan all lost the first legs of their Champions League ties.

Bologna won 1-0 at Brann, while Fiorentina are also in the knockout play-offs.

POLAND

It will come as a surprise to many to find Poland so high up in the table, and that it was in the top two for a while. But Poland will not be here for long.

All four of the country's teams have been playing in the Conference League, while over a third of its points were picked up in the qualifying rounds.

At least the remaining trio are potentially at opposite ends of the Conference League bracket.

FRANCE

It has been a disappointing season for Ligue 1 teams, starting with Nice's failure to make it through Champions League qualifying.

It has not got much better from there for Nice, as they were theneliminated from the Europa League.

Lille, Monaco and Paris St-Germain will feature in the play-offs.

France's chances have been further reduced by Monaco and PSG drawing each other.

GREECE

Greece still has four teams active but is a long way behind the top two slots.

All of its teams will play in February to boost the score, but Olympiakos lost at home to Bayer Leverkusen and PAOK were beaten by Celta Vigo.

CYPRUS

Another surprise name on the list, boosted by Pafos reaching the Champions League for the first time.

But with only two teams still active, and both in the Conference League, Cyprus is not a contender.

DENMARK

Only FC Midtjylland remain, and Denmark is now mathematically out of contention.

What are the key future dates?

Last season, the Premier League's extra place in the Champions League was confirmed on 8 April.

Such has been the high level of English clubs' performance in the top competition this season that it could come earlier this time.

Here are some key dates for the diary:

24-26 February: Knockout play-off round second legs are played for all three competitions which will result in 24 more teams being eliminated.

27 February: Draws are held to place the top eight teams in each competition into the knockout bracket. This is very important as it creates the full path and determines each league's maximum coefficient score. It sets out potential meetings of clubs from the same league, or rival leagues for an extra Champions League place.

17-19 March: Second-leg ties for the round of 16 take place in each competition, with another 24 teams knocked out.

14-16 April: Quarter-final ties are completed. It is possible that the extra places will be confirmed.

5-7 May: Semi-final second legs take place, with the finals being held at the end of the month.

How does the Premier League race for Champions League places look?

Premier League leaders Arsenal (57 points) are four points ahead of Manchester City (53) with Aston Villa (50) in third.

Manchester United (45) are currently fourth and, right now, the extra place in the Champions League would go to fifth-placed Chelsea (44). Liverpool are in sixth place (42).

There are just four points between Chelsea and seventh-placed Brentford - so we could end up with a race for the prize of finishing fifth.

This article is the latest from BBC Sport's Ask Me Anything team.

ESPN to launch 'Women's Sports Sundays' highlighting WNBA and NWSL

ESPN is doubling down on women's sports with programming focused on the WNBA and NWSL.

On Thursday, the network announced plans to launch "Women's Sports Sundays." The weekly program is a first-of-its-kind franchise that will feature WNBA and NWSL matchups, highlight top stars, hone in on big moments, rivalries and more.

“Women’s sports are experiencing continued momentum, and 'Women’s Sports Sundays' is ESPN’s next step in meeting that demand,” Rosalyn Durant, ESPN executive vice president, programming and acquisitions, said via release.

“This franchise is about more than showcasing games — it’s about building a consistent, high-profile destination that reflects the passion, excellence and cultural impact of women’s sports today, while giving athletes and leagues the stage they deserve.”

“Sunday is a day of the week when we see a ton of our best women’s sports programming, and we will have events outside of our primetime window,” said Susie Piotrkowski, vice president of women’s sports programming and espnW.

ESPN will launch its women's sports-focused programming over nine consecutive weeks including 12 games. Details, including matchups and assigned talent for "Women’s Sports Sundays," will be announced at a later date.

"Women's Sports Sundays" debuts in Summer 2026.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: ESPN to start 'Women's Sports Sundays' highlighting WNBA, NWSL in 2026

Most Impactful Bears of 2025: No. 13 Luther Burden III

The Chicago Bears concluded their 2025 season, where they finished with an 11-6 record, an NFC North title and their first playoff win in 15 years under first-year head coach Ben Johnson. And there's no denying that the future is incredibly bright.

Over the next couple of weeks, we'll be counting down our 15 Most Impactful Bears from the 2025 season, which features plenty of young talent that made huge contributions in Chicago's magical season. We'll recap their 2025 season and look ahead to how they factor into 2026. There were plenty of top talent to highlight this season, which made for difficult decisions when narrowing the field to just 15 players and/or coaches.

We continue at No. 13 with a standout rookie in wide receiver Luther Burden III, whose full potential wasn't realized or utilized in his first season. But, when he was involved, Burden showed that he could be a big-time playmaker for the Bears offense in the future.

The Basics

  • Position: Wide receiver
  • Age: 22
  • Experience: 1st season
  • 2025 cap hit: $1.99 million

Most Impactful Bears of 2025: Luther Burden III

2025 stats

  • 47 catches, 60 targets, 652 yards, 2 touchdowns
  • 6 rushes, 37 yards

2025 recap

Luther Burden III wasn't part of the plan heading into the pre-draft process, but he fell right into the waiting arms of Ben Johnson and the Bears at 39th overall. Now, Burden is looking like one of the biggest steals of the 2025 draft class after a modest but promising rookie season in Chicago. After suffering an injury during rookie minicamp that slowed him down, Burden immediately showcased his playmaking potential during training camp and preseason. But it came to fruition for the first time in Week 3 against the Dallas Cowboys, where he caught all three targets for 101 yards and a touchdown, including a 65-yard flea-flicker touchdown from quarterback Caleb Williams. While there were a lot of mouths to feed on offense, Burden got an opportunity to step up with Rome Odunze being sidelined with a foot injury. Burden's best game of the season came in a Week 17 shootout against the San Francisco 49ers, where he caught eight passes (on nine targets) for 138 yards and a score. While Burden's impact wasn't as big as his rookie counterpart Colston Loveland, it's clear that Burden has the potential to be a breakout star in Year 2 in this Ben Johnson-led offense.

2026 outlook

The Bears offense will enter its second season in Ben Johnson's scheme, which means a better understanding for their returning crop of characters. The only player whose future is in question at this point is receiver DJ Moore, whose $28.5 million salary cap hit could make him expendable. If that's the case, it indicates Chicago's confidence in their duo of young wideouts in Burden and Rome Odunze, along with tight ends Colston Loveland and Cole Kmet. Regardless of what happens with Moore, Burden is expected to be featured prominently in his second season after showcasing his amazing potential in the downfield passing game and his overall versatility and playmaking ability. There were times when Burden looked like he could develop into the Bears' WR1, especially with Odunze struggling with drops and an injury down the line last season. Another offseason to work in Johnson's offense and progress as a young player, Burden has the potential to be Chicago's breakout player in 2026.

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This article originally appeared on Bears Wire: Most Impactful Bears of 2025: No. 13 Luther Burden III

Bayern Munich youth goalkeeper already earning top praise

SALZBURG, AUSTRIA - JANUARY 06: Leonard Prescott of FC Bayern Munich warms up prior to the friendly match between FC Red Bull Salzburg and FC Bayern München at Red Bull Arena on January 06, 2026 in Salzburg, Austria. (Photo by S. Mellar/FC Bayern via Getty Images) | FC Bayern via Getty Images

All the talk of the town right now is Bayern Munich’s Jonas Urbig. An interesting winter signing from FC Köln last year was quietly become one of Bayern’s most important signings in recent years. With Neuer sidelined for the next few weeks, the young German goalkeeper has a massive opportunity to present himself as Bayern’s future #1, and possibly propel himself into a World Cup roster under Julian Nagelsmann.

As great as Urbig is, there is another goalkeeper in the Bavarian ranks earning some praise as well. Leonard Prescott, a 16 year old goalkeeper in Bayern Munich’s academy is making serious waves. Prescott is currently starting with Germany’s U-17 team and has impressed the club so far with his performances.

Prescott is primarily playing with Bayern’s U-19 team, but if Manuel Neuer were to retire and hand off the reins to Urbig, it is not hard to imagine a world where Prescott is backing up Urbig in the upcoming years. With both Neuer and Nübel’s futures uncertain, it is hard to anticipate what the goalkeeping depth chart will be for Bayern, but there are clearly plenty of options. Not a bad problem to have.

Should Bayern Munich trust its youth or let the experienced Neuer and Nübel have more time leading the charge? Let us know your thoughts in the comments!

Training gallery: Stepping up for the Magpies

Training gallery: Stepping up for the Magpies
Training gallery: Stepping up for the Magpies

Check out the best images from Thursday’s training at the CFA.

Men's Team

Stones hails supporters on Official Man City Podcast

The City squad were getting ready for the visit of Newcastle in the Premier League on Saturday at 20:00 (UK).

After a rare midweek off, the focus switches back to the title race with the opportunity of closing the gap at the top to two points.

Newcastle stand in the way as we face Eddie Howe’s side for a fourth time this season after clinching a place in the Carabao Cup final with a win in both of the two semi-final legs.

A fifth encounter will follow in the FA Cup next month but thoughts are lasered on our next match against the Magpies.

And the City squad were putting in the hard work for what will be another huge test at the Etihad Stadium.

View the best pictures from training into today’s gallery below…

Former UNC basketball player, NBA coach Doug Moe has passed away

Doug Moe, Head Coach for the Denver Nuggets points his finger as a signal during the NBA Midwest Division basketball game against the Seattle SuperSonics on 6th April 1990 at the McNichols Sports Arena, Denver, Colorado, United States. The Denver Nuggets won the game 119 - 103. (Photo by Damian Strohmeyer/Allsport/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Earlier this week, we got the sad news that former basketball player and coach Doug Moe passed away at the age of 87. Moe is probably best known as the coach of several NBA teams, most notably the Denver Nuggets in the 1980s. His Denver teams played a remarkably fast paced, motion offense, regularly scoring more than 120+ points per game. He was a fairly successful coach too, as his teams made the playoffs in nine of the 10 years he was in Denver, advancing to the conference finals in 1985.

Long before his coaching career, Moe was a player. In fact, he was a player at UNC who seemed to be on his way to great things before circumstances got in the way.

Moe came out of Brooklyn, he was part of the Frank McGuire/NYC pipeline, and began playing for the Tar Heels in the 1958-59 season. He fully broke out the following year, averaging a double double with 16.8 points and a team-leading 11.3 rebounds per game. Finally in 1960-61, he put up a remarkable 20.4 points and 14.0 rebounds a game, for which he was voted an All-American by several of the different voting bodies that hand out that honor.

However, later it was revealed that prior to the 1960-61 season, he had accepted $75 to take a meeting with some people who were looking to fix games. Unlike teammate Lou Brown, who set up the meeting, Moe was never implicated for anything beyond taking the meeting, never mind throwing games, but the damage was done. He was suspended from the university, and the resulting scandal led to McGuire losing his coaching gig at UNC. That, of course, led to Dean Smith getting the gig, so that worked out at least.

Meanwhile, Moe himself got blackballed from the NBA for his part, leading to him spending his playing career in the ABA. He got his start in coaching there as well, eventually coming over to the NBA following the merger. After his Nuggets’ stint, his last head coaching gig came with the 76ers in 1992-93. He mostly walked away from coaching after that, but did later return to the Nuggets as a consultant and assistant coach.

The way his UNC tenure ended makes things a little awkward for the school itself to celebrate him too much. However, Doug Moe was a very good basketball player for the Tar Heels, and that shouldn’t be forgotten.

Real Madrid interested in 16-year-old attacking prodigy resembling Jude Bellingham

Real Madrid interested in 16-year-old attacking prodigy resembling Jude Bellingham
Real Madrid interested in 16-year-old attacking prodigy resembling Jude Bellingham

Over the past few months, Real Madrid have been very active in strengthening their youth and reserve ranks with multiple new additions.

A number of exciting young Spanish prospects have already signed and more are expected to be on the way, including Atletico Madrid’s towering young defender Aimar Garcia.

Real Madrid want Owen Mira

Now, according to ESPN (h/t Mundo Deportivo), Real Madrid have set their sights on a move for Granada academy gem Owen Mira Chukwuemeka, a.k.a, Owen Emeka.

Born in 2009, the youngster is a right-footed winger, who plays on the left flank, and bears some physical resemblance to Real Madrid midfield superstar Jude Bellingham.

Having joined the Granada youth academy after spending time at Tiro Pichon, Mira has grown into an important player for the club’s Juvenil A setup, impressing in the Division de Honor and the Copa del Rey.

At the same time, the 16-year-old winger has already broken into Granada’s reserve team which plays in the RFEF Tercara Division and has featured regularly.

The teenage forward has also trained sporadically with the first-team squad, indicating the potential he possesses.

A number of other clubs are also understood to be showing an interest in Mira, which is why Real Madrid could move to close the deal quickly for his signing at the end of the season.

Anthony Joshua could return sooner than expected after surprise Eddie Hearn update

Anthony Joshua could return to the ring sooner than expected, after the boxing star was involved in a fatal car crash in December.

Just days after Joshua knocked out Jake Paul, beating the influencer in six rounds, he suffered injuries as a passenger in a car accident in Nigeria. The crash claimed the lives of two of Joshua’s teammates: Sina Ghami and Latif “Latz” Ayodele.

In the fallout of that accident, Joshua’s fighting future has been up in the air, with some fans questioning whether the former world heavyweight champion would box again.

However, “AJ” was soon back to training, and now his promoter has suggested that a competitive return could come as soon as July.

“Look, originally the plan with AJ was for him to fight in March, and then fight Tyson Fury in August,” Eddie Hearn told Boxing Scene on Thursday. “That’s not happening, he’s not fighting Tyson Fury next.

“He’s going to come back – I believe – late summer, but physically he’s not yet in a position to return to camp. So, I’m planning, but he’s just resting and preparing.

Anthony Joshua (left) with his promoter Eddie Hearn in February 2025 (Getty Images)
Anthony Joshua (left) with his promoter Eddie Hearn in February 2025 (Getty Images)

“So for me, I’m looking at options to get him back in the ring in July time, but we’ll only know if that’s a real possibility when he returns to camp, which will hopefully be in the next couple of weeks or a month.”

When asked whether Joshua’s next bout could be somewhat of a warm-up for a tougher test, Matchroom’s Hearn said: “I think every fight’s dangerous, coming off what he’s come off, but yeah, I think...

“We’re open to the Tyson Fury fight, but probably more likely end of the year, maybe early 2027.”

PLANS FOR AJ'S RETURN‼️

Eddie Hearn has confirmed to BoxingScene that he is planning a July return for Anthony Joshua.

Who should he face?🤔 pic.twitter.com/40GBcbizVM

— BoxingScene.com (@boxingscene) February 19, 2026

Joshua, 36, was linked with kickboxing champion Rico Verhoeven prior to December’s crash, but Hearn said: “I believe he’s fighting... rumours of him fighting [Oleksandr] Usyk, yeah.”

Usyk, who twice beat Joshua on points, is currently the unified heavyweight champion, while Fabio Wardley holds the WBO title. Elsewhere in the division, Fury will box Arslanbek Makhmudov on 11 April, as the Briton emerges from retirement for the fifth time.

Tyson Fury (left) will box Arslanbek Makhmudov on 11 April (Getty)
Tyson Fury (left) will box Arslanbek Makhmudov on 11 April (Getty)

As Hearn hinted, Joshua and Fury were on course for a long-awaited showdown this year, but AJ’s accident has disrupted those plans. It is currently expected that Fury, 37, will target a world-title fight if he beats Russia’s Makhmudov.

Fury vs Makhmudov will stream live on Netflix, like Joshua’s win over Paul, and it will take place one week after Derek Chisora fights Deontay Wilder. Chisora is a friend of Joshua, who has long been linked to a possible clash with Wilder.

Lakers name Lon Rosen as new President of Business Operations

Mar 17, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; The Los Angeles Lakers logo at midcourt at Crypto.com Arena.
Mar 17, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; The Los Angeles Lakers logo at midcourt at Crypto.com Arena.

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Lakers have named Lon Rosen the new President of Business Operations, the team announced Thursday.

Lakers majority stakeholder and Dodgers owner Mark Walter continues to make his moves in the new era under his helm.

The #Lakers announce Lon Rosen as President of Basketball Operations.

This comes after Tim Harris, who has been the team’s President of Business Operations for more than 30 years, announced he is stepping down. pic.twitter.com/2nIOiPW3Ye

— Carlos Yakimowich (@CarlosYakJr) February 19, 2026

Rosen joins the Lakers after more than a decade with the L.A. Dodgers, where he served as executive vice president and chief marketing officer since 2012. Under his leadership, the Dodgers increased revenue every season, led Major League Baseball in attendance each year since 2013 and won three World Series.

The move marks a return to the organization where Rosen began his career. He interned with the Lakers while in college before becoming an executive in the team’s front office during the 1980s.

“For many years, I have seen the impact that Lon has had in our industry,” Lakers Governor Jeanie Buss said in a statement. “Over that time, I have learned that not only is Lon a great person, but he also has a deep understanding of both sports and entertainment and a true feel for where this business is headed.”

Rosen replaces Tim Harris, who announced earlier this week in an internal email that he would step down after more than 30 years overseeing the Lakers’ business operations.

“Finding someone who could fill Tim’s shoes overseeing the business side of our organization would never be easy,” Buss said. “The answer, we soon realized, was someone both Mark and I knew well — and who already understood the values, culture and commitment to excellence of both the Dodgers and the Lakers.”

Rosen also brings familiarity with the Walter-led ownership group, having worked closely with Walter during his tenure with the Dodgers.

Rosen emphasized adaptability as a core priority in his new role for the franchise.

“I’m beyond grateful to Jeanie and Mark for trusting me with this incredible opportunity,” Rosen said. “As everyone knows, the economics of the sports business are constantly changing — and they will continue to do so. But at root, my job is a simple one: figuring out how to do right by our employees and our partners while ensuring that the Lakers continue to provide an unparalleled experience for our fans in Los Angeles and around the world.”

Rosen added that he looks forward to working alongside Buss, general manager Rob Pelinka and the rest of the Lakers’ front office as the organization enters its next chapter under Walter.

Suns owner Mat Ishbia says 'tanking is losing behavior done by losers" but is confident Adam Silver has fix

Two days after former Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban argued on X that the NBA should actually embrace tanking, current Phoenix Suns and Mercury owner Mat Ishbia used social media on Thursday to call out intentional losing and voice his confidence in league commissioner Adam Silver.

"This is ridiculous! Tanking is losing behavior done by losers," Ishbia wrote on X. "Purposely losing is something nobody should want to be associated with. Embarrassing for the league and for the organizations. And the talk about this as a 'strategy' is ridiculous.

"If you are a bad team, you get a good pick. That makes sense. But purposely shutting down players and purposely losing games is a disgrace and impacts the integrity of whole league.   

"This is much worse than any prop bet scandal. This is throwing games strategically. Horrible for fans that pay to watch and cheer on their team. And horrible for all the real teams that are competing for playoff spots.

"Awful behavior that Adam Silver and the NBA will need to stop with massive changes, and I have complete confidence that with his leadership, he will fix it. Those of us in a position of influence need to speak out… the only 'strategy' is doing right by fans, players and the NBA community."

This past Saturday, during All-Star Weekend, Silver conceded that the league's observed worse tanking behavior this season than it's seen in recent memory.

He also made it clear that he's considering "every possible remedy" to stop that behavior. Silver's open to changing the draft structure, and he didn't rule out taking away picks from tanking teams.

Last week, the NBA fined both the Utah Jazz and the Indiana Pacers six figures for "overt" tanking and, more specifically, for their nefarious roster management in recent games.

The NBA currently has seven teams with fewer than 20 wins. The Jazz and Pacers are among that bottom-dwelling group that's looking toward the future, including this year's draft, which most notably features four potential franchise needle movers: Kansas' Darryn Peterson, BYU's AJ Dybantsa, Duke's Cameron Boozer and UNC's Caleb Wilson.

The Suns, however, are in playoff contention. Ishbia's passionate post quote a Yahoo Sports story from Tom Haberstroh, who power ranked the tanking teams based on a five-factor system.

Despite hitting the reset button — moving away from Kevin Durant and Bradley Beal — Phoenix isn't tanking or even in rebuild mode. It's in seventh place in a crowded Western Conference table.

At 32-23, the Suns have maximized a roster full of players who have a chip on their shoulder.

Their performance and the organization's refreshing transition after carrying the highest payroll in league history last season give Ishbia's comments on Thursday more credibility.

Former Olympic champion Sharpe suffers heavy halfpipe crash

Canada's Cassie Sharpe receives medical assistance after crashing in the Olympic women's freeski halfpipe event (Jeff PACHOUD)

Former Olympic champion Cassie Sharpe was stretchered off the course during the women's halfpipe qualifiers at the Milan-Cortina Games on Thursday after suffering a heavy fall. 

The 33-year-old fell during her second run, losing her skis and poles and lying motionless on the ice.

Medical staff came to her aid and treated her for about nine minutes before she was pulled off the snow on a stretcher. She briefly waved to the crowd.

The 2018 Pyeongchang Olympic champion, who took silver in Beijing four years ago, was firmly on track to qualify for the final at the time of her crash.

jw/gj

USMNT captain Tim Ream 'sympathizes' with fans over World Cup ticket prices

U.S. men's national team captain Tim Ream said that he was sympathetic over fans' concerns about World Cup ticket prices, but emphasized that he and his teammates must focus on what they can control.

Ticket prices have been a major talking point around this summer's tournament, which will be co-hosted by the United States, Mexico and Canada.

Fans have complained that FIFA's pricing is “extortionate” and claimed that following a team from the tournament's start to finish will cost nearly five times as much as the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

USMNT forward Tim Weah weighed in on the issue in an interview with French outlet Le Dauphiné last month.

"It is too expensive," Weah said. "Football should still be enjoyed by everyone. It is the most popular sport. This World Cup will be good, but it will be more of a show."

Those comments drew a rebuke from Weah's national team coach Mauricio Pochettino, who urged his players to stay away from non-soccer topics.

"First of all, I think players need to talk on the pitch, playing football, not outside of the [pitch]," Pochettino said. "It is not [Weah's] duty to evaluate the price of the ticket."

In an interview with USA TODAY Sports, Ream struck a balance.

"We know that there are other things going on, that this sport and what we do is not the be-all and end-all," Ream said. "For us it is our job, and it is the biggest tournament in the history of sport, and it is our job to focus on what we're trying to do.

"Do we sympathize with the paying fans? Absolutely. However, we can't control any of that. And for us as athletes, we always talk about what we can control. What are our controllables? And that's not one of them. Things that are off the field are not one of them, unfortunately for us.

"And so what can we do? We can focus on what we do on the field, putting in good performances and inspiring people all around the country to get on board and go through this journey and go through this World Cup with us."

Ream said that he was hopeful that a deep USMNT run in the tournament would help fuel the growth of soccer in the United States.

"It will be down to the players in the team to inspire the entire country, which is a lot of pressure," the Charlotte FC defender said.

"It's difficult but it's also a great challenge and if you can look at it as a challenge and you can change hearts and minds with a great performance at a World Cup, then why would we not attempt to do that?"

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: World Cup ticket prices get reaction from USMNT captain Tim Ream

Girls state hockey: Hill-Murray overcomes slow start in quarterfinals

With the final seconds ticking away in the first period of their Class AA State Tournament opener on Thursday morning, Hill-Murray coach John Pohl found himself paraphrasing a popular Taylor Swift song.

“The quote we use from time to time is, ‘We’ve seen this movie before,’ ” Pohl said, recalling a handful of games from the Pioneers’ 24-3-1 season, so far, where the defending state champions have out-shot foes by a large margin but have been frustrated by a hot goalie.

The Pioneers were outshooting Lakeville North 20-1 at the time, but had not yet solved Panthers goalie Beth Bigalke, who came to St. Paul on the strength of a pair of overtime shutouts in the section playoffs.

When it was all over, and Hill-Murray had won walking away, advancing to Friday evening’s semifinals with a 6-1 victory at Grand Casino Arena.

It was Addy McLay’s goal with seven seconds remaining in the first period that helped break things open. Olivia Braunshausen set up McLay for the goal, and said that not panicking, either due to the lack of early scoring or the ticking clock, was key in the opening 17 minutes.

“We had a faceoff in our D zone with I think like 32 seconds left, and I knew we were short on time,” Braunshausen said. “Addy was wide open and I know she can rip that home, so I was like, ‘I’ve gotta get this to Addy,’ and she did it.”

Hill-Murray broke it open in the second period with Braunshausen getting the eventual game-winner early in the middle frame, and Reese Unklesbay scoring one of her two goals in the game to give the Pioneers a 4-0 lead after two.

Starting goalie Piper Tam stopped all four shots she faced in the first two periods plus, with Charlotte Oscarson coming on in relief late. Allie Abeln cut to the net to score late for Lakeville North, which will take a 17-10-2 record into the consolation round.

“We came across a buzzsaw today,” Panthers coach Buck Kochevar said, calling Hill-Murray the best team his program has faced in eight trips to the state tourney. “They’re well-oiled and proved that they’re a top-end team, for sure.”

Bigalke finished with 38 saves for Lakeville North in the loss.

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Steven Kwan will get look in center field as Stephen Vogt reshuffles Guardians' outfield

GOODYEAR, Ariz. (AP) — Steven Kwan will get some time in center field during spring training for the Cleveland Guardians as manager Stephen Vogt assesses the best possible outfield combination.

Kwan is a four-time Gold Glove winner in left field. That is tied with Kenny Lofton for the most Gold Gloves in franchise history by an outfielder.

Vogt told reporters on Thursday that Kwan has expressed an interest in playing center at times. Kwan was primarily a center field in Cleveland's minor-league system but has seen action there in only eight games over his five seasons in the majors.

Rookie Chase DeLauter, who made his big-league debut in last season's AL Wild Card series against the Detroit Tigers, could see time in center and right. DeLauter dropped a high fly hit by Detroit’s Gleyber Torres during the first inning in his first game. Three innings later, he made a pinpoint throw to third base, where Zach McKinstry was tagged out by José Ramírez.

George Valera will likely play left field during Cactus League games.

Kwan, a two-time All-Star, and Ramírez were the lone consistent offensive threats on the Guardians last season as they repeated as AL Central Division champions.

“You’re going to see guys moving all over the field during spring, like we’ve done previous years,” Vogt said. “We're trying to optimize for both our best defensive team, coupled with maximizing our potential for offense is what we’re looking for on any given day.”

Vogt added that it could be a couple weeks before he tries Kwan in center.

___

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Winter Olympics 2026: Amber Glenn finds some redemption

USA's Amber Glenn reacts after competing in the figure skating women's single free skating final during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena in Milan on February 19, 2026. (Photo by Gabriel BOUYS / AFP via Getty Images)
USA's Amber Glenn reacts after competing in the figure skating women's single free skating final during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena in Milan on February 19, 2026. (Photo by Gabriel BOUYS / AFP via Getty Images)
GABRIEL BOUYS via Getty Images

MILAN — Redemption is possible, at least on the rink. After a single missed element in the short program doomed her best chance at a medal, Amber Glenn returned to the Olympic ice Thursday night and delivered a much more composed free skate. The audience at Assago Ice Skating Arena heralded her arrival on the ice with applause, and congratulated her on the conclusion of her program with a standing ovation. 

Starting the night in 13th place, Glenn finished her free skate with a score of 147.52, good enough for a conditional first place with 12 skaters left to go. She skated to a medley of “I Will Find You” by Audiomachine and “The Return” by CLANN, and appeared in control, confident and even grateful, pumping her fists and gratefully touching her heart as she skated off the ice. 

“This close,” she said to herself, knowing a slight bobble on her final jumping pass stood between her and near perfection on the routine.

She may leave Milan with only one medal, the team gold she earned last week, but she also leaves with her head held high and her self-esteem reclaimed.

Glenn and her Team USA teammates Alysa Liu and Isabeau Levito arrived in Milan two weeks ago riding a surge of nationwide popularity. The “Blade Angels,” as they dubbed themselves, were a perfect trio — the heartfelt Glenn, the quirky Liu, the understated Levito. They’d shown so much talent, so much promise — all three are national champions — that talk of a podium sweep even took flight. At the very least, one of them would almost surely break the American medal drought that’s existed in women’s figure skating since 2006. 

For Glenn, the first cracks started to show in the team event. Tasked with handling the free skate element — Liu had handled the women’s short program — Glenn was uncharacteristically tentative, ending her routine in third place. 

"If an average person were to watch, they'd probably be like, 'Oh, it's fine. Just a few little things (went wrong), but as skating people we know, there were many, many, many points left out on the table,” Glenn said afterward. “I did not feel or perform the way I wanted to. I physically didn't feel great. My legs were feeling heavy, I was tired, I just didn't feel my best, and I've been practicing here incredibly.”

The United States still claimed the team gold for a second straight Olympics, but Glenn’s face betrayed her anguish and fear that she’d cost Team USA a gold right up until the final results were announced. 

“I think I had some fatigue and I need to really manage that going into the individual event,” Glenn said at the time. “But I'm really proud of the mental strength that I've built over the years to be able to get through some mistakes in the beginning and really fighting in the second half.”

She had no idea that much worse was yet to come. Glenn and her fellow Blade Angels had more than a week between the team event and their individual events, a long time to maintain Olympic-level intensity. 

When Glenn finally took the ice for her short program on Tuesday, she began with a triple axel, a jump so difficult only one other skater in this year’s women’s event landed it. After another successful element, she prepared to do a triple loop, a relatively routine jump; virtually every Olympian on Tuesday’s program completed one. But a slight loss of balance meant she only did two loops instead of three, giving her zero points for the entire element. 

That loss sent her plummeting down the standings; she finished the program in 13th place, more than 11 points behind leader Ami Nakai of Japan. She was visibly devastated, and left the arena after only the briefest of interviews. 

Glenn returned to the ice on Thursday night with an opportunity to rewrite her narrative. She executed the jump she missed two days earlier and rallied to put up a score that will certainly move her well up the leaderboard. But no matter how her final routine went, she would leave Milan as a gold medalist. 

What is the answer to Packers' kick and punt return woes? It's complicated

The Green Bay Packers are looking for a new special teams coordinator after Rich Bisaccia stepped down from the role this week. A fresh start could bring renewed hope the Packers can finally become an above average team on special teams for the first time in recent memory.

One of their key issues is the lack of a dangerous kick or punt returner. What is at the root of Green Bay’s inability to find the answer to a problem which has been prevalent season after season?

There is a sentiment building that part of the problem is the body types the Packers draft, particularly at wide receiver, which is the position most returners come from.

It is true that Green Bay has a type. They haven’t drafted a receiver weighing less than 187 pounds or shorter than 5-9 ⅖ since at least 2006. That is an organizational philosophy, at least partially due to the fact the Packers want receivers who can hold up in the cold weather, and also block.

Note, 187 pounds is not an especially low bar. Packers receivers do not have to be huge, but in general they are going to stay away from the 160-pounders.

Savion Williams was the team’s primary kickoff returner in 2025, and he is listed at over 220 pounds.

It is worth noting he was not a terrible returner, ranking 27th in PFF grade out of the 66 who qualified. He just wasn’t a difference maker, even before the foot injury he played through in the second half of the year.

He is more of an emblem for the Packers’ middling returners over the years rather than the issue itself.

One of Williams’ most notable strengths in college was his ability with the ball in his hands, which seems like a fair enough justification for Brian Gutekunst thinking he could bring something as a returner, but it didn’t translate all that well as a rookie.

So, is Green Bay’s preference for bigger receivers and therefore returners holding them back? It’s complicated.

Among the NFL players with at least 17 combined kick and punt returns in 2025, there were 17 players who had a PFF grade of 80 or above. The average weight of those players was just shy of 192 pounds. Not exactly petite.

There were some small players, like Isaiah Williams (180 pounds), Rashid Shaheed (180), Greg Dortch (175), Kameron Johnson (170) and KaVontae Turpin (153).

But there were also plenty of heavier ones, like Kene Nwangwu (210), Deonte Banks (205), Chimere Dike (195), Luke McCaffrey (195), Jaylin Noel (200), Ray Davis (216), Brashard Smith (196), Parker Washington (212), Malik Washington (194) and Raheem Morris (205).

It appears being an undersized player is not a prerequisite to being a good returner.

Is experience the answer? Williams only returned 15 kicks in college, and all of them were back in 2020. On that basis, the idea he could be a strong returner in the NFL was a bit of a projection.

The average number of college returns by the 17 players mentioned earlier was 49, but six of them had returned fewer than 15 times in college, including two players with only one return and one player with zero attempts.

It is definitely possible to be a capable returner despite a lack of experience. Just ask Keisean Nixon, who only returned three kickoffs at South Carolina before becoming an All-Pro in the NFL.

What about speed? The average 40 time of the players listed was 4.44. Williams ran a 4.48 at last year’s combine while carrying an injury. Regardless of whether he could’ve run a faster time if healthy, he is plenty fast enough in theory.

All of this information shows that finding a strong returner is not an exact science.

However, given that most returners are receivers, it can certainly still be argued that Green Bay is holding itself back due to their preferences, both athletically and in terms of production. They have not drafted a receiver under Brian Gutekunst who did not have at least 900 yards from scrimmage in one of their college seasons.

This year’s upcoming draft class is a good example of the problems their method can present.

There are eight returners eligible for the 2026 NFL draft who posted a 70+ return grade and are listed in the top 350 players on the consensus big board:

  • Kaden Wetjen is shorter than 5-9 and had never had more than 158 receiving yards in a season
  • KC Concepcion is expected to be drafted in the first round
  • Barion Brown weighs 176 pounds and has never had more than 625 receiving yards in a season
  • Caullin Lacy is shorter than 5-9
  • Kevin Coleman weighs 174 pounds
  • Zachariah Branch weighs 180 pounds

Jadarian Price could make some sense, but he is a running back expected to be drafted in the first two rounds, and it seems unlikely the Packers would do that with Josh Jacobs and MarShawn Lloyd still on the team.

That leaves Baylor’s Josh Cameron as the only player that ticks both boxes of being big enough and being a productive enough receiver.

Cameron is a 6-1 and 223-pound receiver who is ranked 135th on the consensus big board. He had 872 receiving yards and nine touchdowns last year, so he is a name to watch on Day 3 of the draft.

The Packers aren’t likely to spend a draft pick and a four-year commitment to take up a roster spot for just a returner. They want them to be productive players from scrimmage, too and a viable position player in their own right.

That makes sense, because what if it turns out the player you drafted just to be your returner, isn’t actually that good at it when they get to the NFL? As discussed earlier, experience isn’t everything, and then you have essentially lit a draft pick on fire.

But the combination of the bars they appear to set for athleticism and production do limit the pool of potential receivers they would even give a chance to.

What about an established veteran? Accomplished returners are not abundant in free agency each year, but if the Packers did want to go that route, Devin Duvernay, who is 5-10 and 200 pounds and had a 76.3 PFF grade last year, could be an option in free agency.

Perhaps Gutekunst would be more willing to use a roster spot for "just a returner" if he is more confident that player is actually the answer. Still, it is more likely they simply roll into training camp and let a battle commence among their existing players as normal.

If the Packers are ever going to become one of the better special teams units in the league, the return specialist is something they need to improve, and yes, they do make it harder on themselves with their process, but there is no tried-and-true path to follow in search of the solution.

This article originally appeared on Packers Wire: What is the answer to Packers' kick and punt return woes? It's complicated

Phoenix Suns owner lambasts NBA over tanking issue

NBA commissioner Adam Silver

Phoenix Suns owner lambasts NBA over tanking issue originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

It’s safe to say that Phoenix Suns owner Matt Ishbia isn’t a fan of tanking.

In a recent social media post, Ishbia lambasted tanking and the organizations that participate in it, painting it as a scourge on the league.  

"This is ridiculous! Tanking is losing behavior done by losers," Ishbia wrote. "Purposely losing is something nobody should want to be associated with. Embarrassing for the league and for the organizations. And the talk about this as a 'strategy' is ridiculous.

"If you are a bad team, you get a good pick. That makes sense. But purposely shutting down players and purposely losing games is a disgrace and impacts the integrity of whole league."

This story will be updated. 

More NBA news

USA vs Canada Women's Hockey Olympic Gold Medal Live Updates, Scores

Team USA and Canada women's hockey meet once again at Milan Cortina 2026.

When they hit the ice today, Thursday, Feb. 19 at 1:10 p.m. ET for puck drop, it's for all the marbles—an Olympic gold medal and the world's top accolade in the sport for the next four years.

It will be their seventh meeting under these circumstances. The two titans met in the earlier stages of this tournament, giving fans and players both an early perspective of how the two may match up. 

It resulted in a 5-0 win for the southern neighbors in the red, white, and blue, extending a seven-game winning streak against the Canadians.

Coming into this game, USA has outscored opponents 31-1. 

With one more assist or goal today against Canada, captain Hilary Knight can become the definitive all-time top points scorer in Team USA history at 33.

She tied Jenny Potter with an assist against Canada in the group stage.

Canada will continue their mission for revenge and to defend their 2022 Beijing title.

Marie-Philip "Captain Clutch" Poulin, back in the line up after missing their first meeting, will hope to hand Team USA their first loss of the 2026 Winter Olympics when it matters most. Follow the live updates below.

USA vs Canada Women's Hockey Olympic Gold Medal Game Live Updates, Scores

Refresh your page regularly to view the latest live updates, scoring highlights and more for USA vs Canada in the 2026 Winter Olympics women's hockey Gold medal game on Thursday, Feb. 19.

Last update: 2:55  p.m. ET

3rd Period Is Live! - 19:38 3rd

USA 0, Canada 1

Stay tuned for live updates of the 3rd and potentially final period of the 2026 Winter Olympics women's hockey tournament as USA and Canada fight for a gold medal and so much more.

Carpenter and Turnbull met at center ice to start the third, Carpenter takes it back to give USA the first o-zone possession of the period.

USA and Canada Continue Tug Of War For Gold - End of 2nd

USA 0, Canada 1

After two periods, both teams have much to be proud of with defense taking the focal point following O'Neill's shorthanded goal early in the period.

Both USA and Canada were left searching for a way to create enough chaos in front of the crease to score. 

They're sending their fastest forwards flying towards the crease with set passes ready to go, but defense has taken the focal point across the ice as these incredible athletes put their bodies on the line for the gold.

USA has recovered quite a bit from their perceived nerves as the second period wound down, putting out multiple strong shifts with O-zone time.

Frankel and Desbiens continue to put on a show as well.

During the intermission, Hilary Knight noted in an interview on the broadcast that she was hoping to see more speed from her team and that Team USA is, in short, nowhere near their maximum.

Now playing: "you were born for this" speech from Miracle.

Shots on goal:

  • USA: 20
  • CAN: 21

Faceoffs Won:

  • USA: 19
  • CAN: 23

USA's got to find a way to pick up Frankel. She's giving them every chance and just completely saved that broken coverage in the DZ. A lot of players picking their worst day for a bad game.

— Chris Peters (@chrismpeters) February 19, 2026

Frankel Makes Huge Stop On Fillier - 4:24 2nd

USA 0, Canada 1

Fillier was flying towards the net with the tap-in waiting for the pass which came from Jaques. Frankel had her best save of the game so far with a great move from right to left to shut the door and stop the bleed for Team USA.

Edwards seemed to take issue with Maltais creating some traffic in front of Frankel on the next play as the intensity continues to rise.

Tug of War Continues, Desbiens Remains Strong - 5:45 2nd

USA 0, Canada 1

Canada's defense has been stifling even the likes of Abbey Murphy as she tries to break into the zone.

Pucks have been flying high through the air all around Desbiens, who has been able to wrangle them down and get the whistle blown.

Team USA continued trying to brute force their offense to regain momentum through the middle of the frame.

Shots on goal:

  • USA: 16
  • CAN: 12

Canada Finding Ways To Beat USA Defense - 8:40 2nd

USA 0, Canada 1

Unlike their first game, Canada has found better ways in this game to expose the United States defense as they pinch in for offensive chances. The open ice behind them gives Canada's forwards a chance to break out in transition.

While USA is finding moments of good where they can establish their offense in the zone, they aren't able to get a clear shot on Desbiens before turning it over.

Blocked shots by Canada's defense have been coming up big as well to limit pucks getting to the crease.

Shots on goal:

  • USA: 14
  • CAN: 11

Watch In US: Canada's Shorthanded Goal For The Lead

Watch Kristin O'Neill score the opening goal for the gold medal game between USA and Canada in Milan.

SHORTHANDED GOAL. 💪

It's Kristin O'Neill who gives Canada the lead. pic.twitter.com/vapn6D28Hj

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 19, 2026

Bilka Gets Open Net, Shoots Wide - 15:26 2nd

USA 0, Canada 1

Heise and Bilka continue to be a dangerous duo for Team USA as they look for the tying goal to stay in this gold medal game. Bilka aimed for the top corner to beat Desbiens but it went wide and into the netting.

Physicality has been picking up as Canada tries to get into the Americans' heads with their lead. Maltais was guilty this time, getting some extra words in after the whistle behind Frankel.

Canada's experience is starting to show through as the nerves appear to be affecting USA's younger roster.

Shots on goal:

  • USA: 10
  • CAN: 10

Canada Short-Handed Goal! O'Neill From Stacey - 18:12 2nd

USA 0, Canada 1

USA started the period with the advantage as Canada looked to show off their own penalty kill unit and keep the Americans out of the net.

Laila Edwards was all over the place, putting up a no-look shot above the circle but it was Canada that recovered and surged back the other direction. 

O'Neill received the pass to the slot from Laura Stacey near the boards to put it past Aerin Frankel for the second allowed goal of the Olympics by this Team USA.

KRISTIN O'NEILL 🚨 SHORTHANDED 🇨🇦

🇨🇦 1 - 0 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/5vLt4ULN6K

— CBC Olympics (@CBCOlympics) February 19, 2026

The goal ruins USA's perfect record on the penalty kill.

USA scored 28 consecutive goals between their first and second goal of this tournament.

Shots on goal:

  • USA: 9
  • CAN: 9

USA Survives, Gets Power Play To Start Second - End Of 1st

USA 0, Canada 0

Chants of "USA" rained down in the arena as the clock ticked past a minute remaining of the first twenty of this epic North American gold medal game match-up.

Just before the clock hit zero, Bilka sent a shot in for a bumper deflection by Alex Carpenter to beat Desbiens, but it flew wide after hitting Carpenter's tape.

USA will return to the ice with the man-advantage after Canada was called for tripping. It's their first power play of the game after Canada had the first two, 0-2. 

USA's power play has been lackluster in the tournament so far, with just 4 goals on 20 attempts, but their penalty kill has been lights out with a now 13-0 perfect performance.

Oh yeah, plus they have a shorthanded goal making them +1 on the penalty kill this Winter Olympics.

It's the first time USA has not scored in the first period in the tournament. 

Six different players have put a shot on goal for both teams, but Poulin and Clark lead with two each.

Canada's power play has failed to convert twice, despite their tournament-best of 36.8% (7-19).

Shots on goal:

  • USA: 6
  • CAN: 8

Penalties In Minutes:

  • USA: 4
  • CAN: 2

USA survives its most challenging period of the tournament so far even 0-0. Power play to start the second period. Much needed reset at intermission.

— Chris Peters (@chrismpeters) February 19, 2026

Canada Got Another Power Play But USA Holds - 2:37 1st

USA 0, Canada 0

Joy Dunne was called for tripping as Ambrose went down near Canada's net, to Desbiens left. A frustrating penalty for the Americans to open up the opportunity for Canada to take control.

On the opening face off of the power play, Scamurra ran the puck down to Canada's end with clear ice but was back-checked before she could get a shot off.

Canada added just one shot on goal during their second power play of the game.

This Game Is Much Different Than Prelims - 5:00 1st

USA 0, Canada 0

Things are looking better for Canada after 15 than they did in the opening round game between the two. Here's Chris Peters' take.

This first period looks a heck of a lot different than last time these two teams met. USA not getting through the neutral zone clean and ending up on their heels far more than a team with their wheels should be.

— Chris Peters (@chrismpeters) February 19, 2026

Canada Finding Rhythm But Can't Convert - 7:42 1st

USA 0, Canada 0

Canada threaded together a number of chances in a row to throw the puck at Frankel. USA's defense held strong, blocking shots from across the line-up and not allowing a shot to make it to the netminder for over five minutes.

Missed passes and wide shots have also been an issue early as Canada try to calibrate in such limited spaces that this American team is giving them.

Momentum Hangs In Balance After Ten - 10:00 1st

USA 0, Canada 0

Both teams are still looking to grasp control of this gold medal game after the first half of the period.

Dangerous chances are about even, and still minimal so far. USA has spent more time in their defensive zone in this game than any other game in the tournament—a positive early sign for Canada.

Canada Gets First Power Play, USA Kills It Off - 12:27 1st

USA 0, Canada 0

Abbey Murphy was sent to the box moments after getting a breakout pass and shot on Desbiens. After the whistle and a short conversation, officials called the "too many men" penalty.

No doubt considering the additional scrutiny they are under after the controversial missed call on Czechia vs USA in men's quarterfinal match yesterday.

Ambrose had the best chance of the power play with less than 10 seconds remaining, forcing Frankel to making a sprawling save with the puck between her pads before it was cleared out.

Shots on goal:

  • USA: 4
  • CAN: 4

USA Holding Canada In Own End - 15:20 1st

USA 0, Canada 0

Two more shots on goal come from USA as Laila Edwards chucks it in from the point and the top line does a good job putting early pressure on Desbiens and the Canadian defense.

One good chance for Canada came from Marie-Philip Poulin, who skated with speed to Aerin Frankel's right side before slinging a wrist shot under the dot that was swallowed up. She looks hungry already.

Caroline Harvey Takes First Shot - 18:00 1st

USA 0, Canada 0

Desbiens was forced to make the first save of the game, stopping a shot from Caroline Harvey, the leading points scorer for Team USA.

Desbiens vs Frankel In Net, USA Wins Opening Face Off - 20:00 1st

USA 0, Canada 0

Let's have some fun today with some top notch Olympic gold medal hockey between two of the best teams in the world.

Alex Carpenter and Blayre Turnbull met at center ice with USA taking control on the opening face off.

It's so LOUD in the arena, this crowd came ready for a show.

Puck Drop Is Next: USA vs Canada In The Battle for Gold

Two teams meet at center ice in Milan to battle for an Olympic gold medal. Two familiar foes, USA and Canada, traveled to Europe to continue their long-time rivalry in front of the entire world.

After winning every preliminary and elimination game with just one goal allowed en route, Team USA is primed for victory.

Team Canada pursues their sixth gold medal with Marie-Philip Poulin in the lineup to try to put it to the Americans. They'll need contribution from across the lineup of their PWHL-packed roster to keep this game close and put USA on their heels.

Incoming pucks and A GOLD MEDAL GAME 👀 #WinterOlympicspic.twitter.com/e8cu8R85T4

— USA Hockey (@usahockey) February 19, 2026

USA Coach John Wroblewski "Put In The Work"

Before leading Team USA on the Olympic stage, John Wroblewski put in the work across the USHL, ECHL and AHL.

Now he’s coaching for gold. 🇺🇸🥇 Good luck to John and the U.S. Women’s Team in today’s final!@USHL | @ECHL | @TheAHL#MilanCortina2026#Olympics#USHL#ECHL#AHLpic.twitter.com/Kixr9FYhG4

— FloHockey (@FloHockey) February 19, 2026

Where To Watch USA vs Canada Olympic Gold Medal Game

The USA vs Canada game will be broadcast on Peacock, USA Network, and NBCOlympics.com.

In Canada, olympic hockey will be broadcast on CBC. 

Watch professional and junior hockey live streaming throughout February on FloHockey including the American Hockey League (AHL), ECHL, and many of North America's top junior leagues: OHL, QMJHL, and USHL.

When Does USA vs Canada Women's Hockey Play

Team Canada plays Canada today, Feb. 19 at 1:10 p.m. ET.

USA vs Canada Projected Lines For 2026 Winter Olympics Gold Medal Game

Here are the official projected lines for the 2026 Winter Olympics women's hockey gold medal game for Team USA and Team Canada.

Canada Women's Hockey Projected Lines vs USA Today

Forwards

  • Watts - Poulin - Fillier
  • Clark - Turnbull - Stacey
  • Maltais - Nurse - Jenner
  • Gosling - O'Neill - Spooner
  • Gardiner

Defense

  • Larocque - Fast
  • Shelton - Jaques
  • Thompson - Ambrose
  • Tabin

Goalies

  • Desbiens
  • Maschmeyer

One last look. 🇨🇦

Pour une dernière fois. 🇨🇦#MilanoCortina2026pic.twitter.com/ZSuZ9aWVJT

— Hockey Canada (@HockeyCanada) February 19, 2026

Team USA Women's Hockey Projected Lines vs Canada

Forwards

  • Dunne - Carpenter - Knight
  • Bilka - Heise - Murphy
  • Coyne - Pannek - Zumwinkle
  • Curl - Janecke - Simms
  • Scamurra

Defense

  • Keller - Edwards
  • Harvey - Winn
  • Stecklein - Barnes
  • Guilday

Goalies

  • Frankel
  • Philips

Gold medal game lines incominggg 🇺🇸#WinterOlympics game preview: https://t.co/D98mCtDmA8pic.twitter.com/s8WY7sxJUn

— USA Hockey (@usahockey) February 19, 2026

Top 5 Points Scorers, 2026 Winter Olympics - Women's Hockey

  1. Caroline Harvey, USA (2g, 7a)
  2. Daryl Watts, CAN (2g, 6a)
  3. Hannah Bilka, USA (4g, 3a)
  4. Thea Johansson, SWE (4g, 3a)
  5. Laura Kluge, GER (3g, 4a)

Top 5 Goalies, 2026 Winter Olympics (≥3 GP) - Women's Hockey

  1. Aerin Frankel, USA (0.25 GAA, .985 SV%)
  2. Emerance Maschmeyer, CAN (0.47 GAA, .957 SV%)
  3. Andrea Brändli, SUI (1.94 GAA, .952 SV%)
  4. Ebba Svensson Träff, SWE (1.22 GAA, .944 SV%)
  5. Klára Peslarová, CZE (2.01 GAA, .933 SV%)

Marie-Philip Poulin Shares Her Memories Of Golden Goal In Sochi 2014

Relive the golden goal that Team Canada captain Marie-Philip Poulin described as "one of the most memorable moments of her career" as she reacts to a photo from Sochi 2014.

Where were you when❓ Marie-Philip Poulin shares the memories of her overtime winner in the gold medal game at #Sochi2014.@HockeyQuebec | @PWHL_Montrealpic.twitter.com/wgptHSS0JW

— Hockey Canada (@HockeyCanada) February 19, 2026

Müller, Switzerland Defeats Sweden For Second Ever Olympic Medal

The Swiss women's national team defeated Sweden in overtime to secure their second Olympic medal—the first being Bronze in 2014 after defeating... you guessed it, Sweden.

The success marks another step in continuing their Olympic progression up the ranks after losing to Finland in the Bronze medal game in Beijing in 2022 and 5th place finish in 2018.

It was Boston Fleet forward Alina Müller who came up huge for the Swiss, sending and receiving the back-and-forth pass from Ivana Wey with less than a minute left of 3-on-3 overtime.

Müller was iconic throughout the tournament for Team Switzerland, with three goals and two assists. Her performance in 2026 pushed her career total to 28, good enough for 8th all-time in women's Olympic hockey (15g, 13a). 

MÜLLER FOR THE MEDAL.🇨🇭
Switzerland wins Olympic bronze in OVERTIME! pic.twitter.com/DZCHQxEz4u

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 19, 2026

Watch: Instant Reactions To Yesterday's Men's Quarterfinals Chaos

FloHockey's Chris Peters and Robert Babiak break down all the action from the Milan-Cortina hockey tournaments in the Hockey Daily Reaction Show: Milan-Cortina presented by Fortune Tires.

Tune in to their reaction after the women's Olympic gold medal game this afternoon at 4:30 p.m. ET on YouTube, X, and anywhere you can watch the FloSports app.

FloHockey's Chris Peters and Robert Babiak break down all the action from the Milan-Cortina hockey tournaments in the Hockey Daily Reaction Show: Milan-Cortina presented by @fortunetiresusa. #FortuneTiresUSA#MilanCortina2026#livehttps://t.co/v9qBvAzSgE

— FloHockey (@FloHockey) February 18, 2026

What Would Winning Gold Mean To Team USA?

Hear from Team USA on what it would mean to bring the Olympic gold back to the states.

The journey reaches its peak. 🇺🇸
Gold medal game. Today at 1:10 p.m. ET on USA Network and Peacock. #WinterOlympicspic.twitter.com/E1hYnUEK3x

— USA Hockey (@usahockey) February 19, 2026

2026 Olympic Hockey Men's Semifinals Round Schedule: Here's The Bracket

Friday, Feb. 20 — Semifinals

  • 10:40 a.m. ET – Canada vs Finland
  • 3:10 p.m. ET – USA vs Slovakia

Saturday, Feb. 21

  • 2:40 p.m. ET – Men’s Bronze medal game

Sunday, Feb. 22

  • 8:10 a.m. ET – Men’s Gold medal game

Milan Cortina 2026 Live Coverage Coming To FloHockey

FloHockey is your source for the best coverage, live broadcasts, and all-access content below the National Hockey League—over the next few weeks that includes coverage of the 2026 Olympic Winter Games in Italy. 

Every day at 6:30 p.m. ET from Feb. 12-18, FloHockey analyst Chris Peters and co-host Robert Babiak will be bringing you the latest coverage, analysis, and news from Milan Cortina 2026.

Here's when to tune in on the final weekend, Feb. 19-22:

  • Thursday, Feb. 19 - 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Friday, Feb. 20 - 6:30 p.m. ET
  • Saturday, Feb. 21 - 9:05 p.m. ET
  • Sunday, Feb. 22 - 11:30 a.m. ET

Tune in LIVE on the FloHockey 24/7 FAST channel, available on Prime Video and Fubo, or watch for free on FloHockey YouTube.

Watch Hockey Live Streams Free On FloHockey

From the top 2026 NHL draft prospects to first-round picks looking to develop their game before making it in the National Hockey League—FloHockey has the best broadcast schedule for junior hockey and professional hockey below the NHL.

Each week, you can catch numerous Ontario Hockey League (OHL), Quebec Maritimes Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), American Hockey League (AHL), ECHL and many more games streaming live for free on FloHockey and YouTube.

NHL Prospect Coverage On FloHockey

The best, and most complete, coverage of the NHL minor league hockey and NHL Draft is found on FloHockey. Don't miss the latest new prospect guides, rankings and more from Chris Peters and the FloHockey staff.

Watch the AHL, ECHL, QMJHL, USHL, And More On FloHockey

FloHockey is the streaming home to some of the best hockey leagues in North America, including the ECHL and more. Check out the broadcast schedule to watch more hockey.

Join The Hockey Conversation On FloHockey Social

Australian sports reporter apologizes for drinking alcohol before Winter Olympic broadcast live shot

TOWNSVILLE, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 17: Television commentator Danika Mason does a piece to camera before the start of the round 25 NRL match between North Queensland Cowboys and Cronulla Sharks at Qld Country Bank Stadium on August 17, 2023 in Townsville, Australia. (Photo by Ian Hitchcock/Getty Images)
Television commentator Danika Mason was clearly inebriated during a live Winter Olympics segment.
Ian Hitchcock via Getty Images

Australian sports presenter Danika Mason apologized Thursday after drinking alcohol before a Channel Nine’s Today show live Winter Olympics broadcast. Mason slurred her words throughout the segment and went off-topic, discussing iguanas when the segment had been focused on coffee. Studio host Karl Stefanovic attempted to cover for Mason, saying that cold weather can affect speech.

“I want to take full responsibility, it’s not the standard I set myself,” Mason said Thursday. “So in saying that, I’m genuinely really sorry and I’m thanking everyone for those messages I’ve received as well.”

Mason added that she shouldn't have had a drink on an empty stomach and that the cold weather did not help.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, however, expressed his clear support for Mason.

“I’m pro Danika. Good on her,” Albanese said. “She’s over in Italy … and she would have been tired. It’s the time difference. It would have been having an impact. Nothing to see here."

Yesterday — 19 February 2026Yahoo! Sports - News, Scores, Standings, Rumors, Fantasy Games

Jordan Stolz’s bid for four speed-skating golds crumbles in 1500m as Ning Zhongyan shines

Jordan Stolz, Ning Zhongyan and Kjeld Nuis pose with their medals. Photograph: Daniel Munoz/AFP/Getty Images

On an afternoon when the Olympic record kept falling, Jordan Stolz skated fast enough to win the gold at any other Winter Games. Just not this one.

The 21-year-old American was foiled in his bid for a third gold medal in eight days on Thursday, winning silver in the 1500m in a time of 1:42.75 after lowering the Olympic marks in the 1000m last Wednesday and the 500m on Saturday and threatening to become only the second American to win more than two golds in any sport at a single Winter Games.

China’s Ning Zhongyan was the surprise gold medalist, crossing in an Olympic-record time of 1:41.98sec – 0.77sec ahead of Stolz – after seizing the race with early aggression. Kjeld Nuis of the Netherlands, the two-time defending Olympic champion in his final Winter Games, came in 0.84sec off Ning’s pace for the bronze to the delight of another Dutch-heavy crowd.

Related: ‘An Olympic miracle’: Twist in Conan Doyle’s skimo tale as Russian snares silver

For the 26-year-old Ning, already a bronze medalist in the men’s 1000m and the team pursuit, it was the first Olympic gold of his career and China’s first speed skating medal of these Olympics.

“When Jordan was skating in the last pair, I still did not think the gold was mine,” Ning said afterwards. “He has been in incredible form all season. Even after he crossed the line, I was still not completely sure. It was only when the result was confirmed that it started to sink in. It is an amazing feeling.”

The 1500m in speed skating is known as the race of kings because it sits at the perfect crossroads of the sport’s demands. The race requires the raw pace of a sprinter and the endurance of a distance specialist, ruthlessly exposing any weakness in either facet.

Many of the sport’s greatest champions have claimed the 1500m title, making it a proving ground where the most complete skater earns the crown. Only three of the 30 men’s 500m medalists from 1988 through 2022 even skated the 1500m.

Dutch skater Joep Wennemars, perhaps hard-done in the 1000m, laid down the early marker from the 11th pair with an Olympic-record time of 1:43.05, setting off a wall of noise in the banks of orange-clad supporters.

Two heats later, while Stolz calmly made circuits on the inner warm-up lane, Ning lowered that mark with a brilliant display of front-foot skating, putting down second-best early splits of 22.99sec and 47.86sec before taking control at 1100m with a field-best 1:13.80 and never looking back. Nuis, skating head-to-head in the same pair, was fastest after 700m but his early aggression proved costly on the final lap.

Stolz went off in the final pair, his introduction eliciting deafening roars from a crowd braced for history. What followed was almost conservative. He completed the opening lap ranked fifth at 300m (23.36), where he remained at 700m (48.82), never chasing the blistering early pace set by Ning and Nuis. He closed in 27.60, faster than Ning, and the quickest final lap among the medalists, but it proved too little too late.

He circled the oval slowly with his head bowed after his time flashed on the screen while Ning celebrated with his coaches before taking a victory lap wearing the Chinese flag as a cape. Wennemars finished fourth, despite briefly holding the best time in Olympic history, 0.26sec out of the medals.

“When I saw Ning’s [time], I thought that was really fast,” Stolz said. “I thought, ‘I can skate that time in Inzell, at the last World Cup.’ But here, that’s a really fast time.

“I just didn’t quite have the legs. The beginning part was a little slow. I thought I could maybe get it back, but I was just beginning to die off.

“Ning had the race of his life. I didn’t have one of my best, but I am still happy with silver. I have two golds and I was actually really happy that Ning was able to pull it off. I really like Ning.”

Stolz entered the Olympics beneath immense expectations, already a seven-time world champion and the favorite here across three individual distances. Had he completed 500-1000-1500 treble – as he did at two of the past three world championships – he would have become the first male speed skater to win three golds at a Games since Norway’s Johann Olav Koss did so at the Lillehammer Olympics in 1994.

Stolz’s trajectory since Beijing 2022 has been meteoric. At 17 as an Olympic debutant, he finished 13th in the 500m and 14th in the 1000m. Four years later, he has won two golds and a silver with one last medal chance in Saturday’s mass start.

Raised in Kewaskum, Wisconsin, and developed at the Pettit National Ice Center in Milwaukee, Stolz has concentrated on blade setup, ice density and aerodynamic efficiency in pursuit of what he calls “free speed”. The Milan track – a temporary Olympic venue that has already produced some of the fastest times in Olympic history – has played into that mindset.

Ning’s win on Thursday marked the seventh Olympic record of the competition after Francesca Lollobrigida in the women’s 3000m, Norway’s Sander Eitrem in the men’s 5000m, Jutta Leerdam of the Netherlands in the women’s 1000m, Stolz in the 1000m and 500m, and Dutch star Femke Kok in the women’s 500m.

“After the Beijing Winter Olympics, the level in speed skating just kept getting higher and higher,” Ning said. “It felt like there was a mountain in front of me, and no matter what I did, I just could not get past it.

“But I never stopped believing in myself. I kept telling myself to stay patient, to keep putting in the work, to trust that all the effort would add up one day. Today was that day. Even now, it still feels a little unreal that I was able to do this.”

What country is AIN? Explaining abbreviation for Russian figure skater at 2026 Winter Olympics

What country is AIN? Explaining abbreviation for Russian figure skater at 2026 Winter Olympics originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Figure skating is one of the Winter Olympics' signature offerings. No event within its orbit carries more weight than its last — the women's singles.

Women's singles has long served a platform for the sport's finest talents to shine. From Katarina Witt's dominance with East Germany in the 1984 and 1988 Games to Tara Lipinski's triumphs in the 1998 tournament, the event is a memorable one, offering a spotlight for the sport's finest talents to flaunt their gifts.

The 2026 iteration of the competition is no exception. Ami Nakai, Kaori Sakamoto and Alysa Liu are some of the standouts who have captivated the masses thus far. So too has Adeliia Petrosian, an 18-year-old who could compete for a podium place.

When she takes to the ice, Petrosian sports an unfamiliar flag — one that includes the "AIN" abbreviation on it. Just what is Petrosian's country of origin? And why must she compete under the AIN banner? Here's what you need to know.

MORE 2026 OLYMPICS: Live medal tracker | Viewer's guide | Day-by-day schedule

What country is AIN?

"AIN" is the country code for "Individual Neutral Athletes", referred to as Athlètes Individuels Neutres in French. The team consists of Russian and Belarusian athletes who meet several criteria, one of which bars athletes who "actively support" Russia's ongoing war with Ukraine.

Russian athletes competed under the Russian Olympic Committee (ROC) banner during the 2022 Winter Olympics, an aftershock of a doping scandal which brought about a two-year ban from all major sporting events.

Like FIFA and UEFA, the IOC swiftly moved to bar Russia and Belarus from international competition following Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine. They've been inconsistent in their willingness to apply that tactic elsewhere: Israel has fielded teams for the 2024 Summer Olympics and 2026 Winter Olympics despite the country committing a genocide against Palestinians, as laid out by numerous human rights organizations, including Amnesty International, the United Nations and Human Rights Watch.

Twenty athletes are presently playing under the AIN banner, including Petrosian and Nikita Filippov, a Russian ski mountaineer who claimed silver in the men's sprint in 2026.

MORE: What's the story behind Alysa Liu's teeth piercings?

Where is Adeliia Petrosian from?

Petrosian hails from Moscow. The 18-year-old is widely considered one of Russia's best skaters, capturing three Russian national championships and three Russian Grand Prix Final titles.

The 2026 Winter Olympics represents just the second time Petrosian has competed in a senior-level event outside of Russia since 2022. Her performances are artful and athletic, pockmarked by dizzying spins and quadruple jumps, the hardest skill to master in the sport.

Her inclusion on the AIN roster has made her the subject of some controversy. Petrosian has never tested positive for steroids or been implicated in doping. But the ROC had its 2022 team event gold medal stripped when one of Petrosian's training mates, then-15-year-old Kamila Valieva, tested positive for a banned substance thought to improve stamina and endurance.

Valieva served a four-year ban as a result of the alleged misdeed. The rest of her team — including coach Eteri Tutberidze and choreographer Daniil Gleikhengauz — were spared punishment. Gleikhengauz is Petrosian's coach at the 2026 Winter Olympics, while Tutberidze — officially serving as one of Georgia's figure skating coaches — reportedly accompanied Petrosian during practices, according to The New York Times.

MOREYoungest, oldest American Olympians in 2026

Why is Russian figure skater allowed to compete?

Petrosian satisfied the International Skating Union's requirements to return to competition as an unaffiliated athlete. The pathway required athletes to complete several steps. The IOC ruled that AIN athletes had to disavow Russia's war with Ukraine and "not have any ties to military agencies in their countries,", according to NBC.

MORE: Explaining the differences between ice dancing and figure skating

Last time Russian figure skater won Olympic medal

Russians have found plenty of success in the women's singles event in the Winter Olympics. They nearly swept the podium places in 2018 and 2022, taking gold and silver in each tournament. However, athletes were unable to perform under Russia's banner following the suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee amid the country's doping scandal.

The last time a Russian won a medal in the women's singles event while competing for Russia was in 2014, when Adelina Sotnikova outshined Japan's Yuna Kim and Italy's Carolina Kostner for the prize.

MORE:Full guide to figure skating scoring system

Jutta Leerdam flaunts her medal-winning physique for her Olympic Village farewell

Jutta Leerdam flaunts her medal-winning physique for her Olympic Village farewell originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Stunning Dutch speed skater Jutta Leerdam is leaving the 2026 Winter Games with a silver medal in the 500 meters, a gold in her signature event — the 1,000 meters — and a legion of new fans.

But before she took off for home, she donned her tight orange athleisure top and black Fila pants for an emotional farewell to the Olympic Village, flaunting her incredible medal-winning physique and heart-achingly endearing personality.

The Wednesday, February 18 TikTok share begins with Leerdam in front of the Village’s famous Olympic rings. “She doesn’t know it yet but this video will into a transition,” is written over the selfie footage, of the clearly newly-arrived athlete, smiling. Then the video cuts to a new shot of the speed skater, now with two medals around her neck.

“I thought the first video is one I will show my kids one,” she captioned the sweet montage. “Olympic gold, silver and an Olympic record…. Pinch me.”

In her lead-up TikTok video, which she posted the day prior, Leerdam admits to delaying her departure because of a cold.

MORE JUTTA: Jutta Leerdam could score $1M for this 'flashing underwear' moment after winning gold

MORE JUTTA: Gold medalist Jutta Leerdam rocks skimpy swimsuit as ‘strongest, sexiest’ Olympian

MORE JUTTA: Jutta Leerdam flaunts flawless physique in risky thong, see-through gown

“I cannot believe it, guys,” she says in the Tuesday, February 17 video. “My Olympics is so complete. I got both colors and on my favorite distance I won gold it’s just a dream. Now I’m going to the Olympic Village to get all my stuff, which means it’s coming to an end. But I can’t believe this. This is so crazy. This is all I wanted and I did it so…mind-blowing.”

READ MORE!

Top-10 player in 2027 class, KJ Green, schedules visit to Oregon

The Oregon Ducks are setting up their visit schedules for the coming spring, getting some of the top recruits in the nation to Eugene for the spring season so they can check out practices and the spring game.

On Thursday, 4-star edge rusher KJ Green announced his visit schedule and stated that he will be coming out to the Pacific Northwest in mid-April, visiting the Ducks on April 27. Green will also see Texas, Notre Dame, Auburn, Alabama, Miami, Georgia, South Carolina, and LSU this spring.

Green is one of the best players in the entire 2027 class, rated by 247Sports as the No. 10 overall player in the nation, and the No. 3 edge rusher. He is also the No. 2 player from Georgia, standing at 6-foot-4, 215 pounds. Green released a list of his top-12 schools last fall, which did not feature the Ducks, but Oregon has been able to get in the mix since then, and will work to further their progress this spring when Green comes out to Eugene.

At the moment, the Ducks have the No. 14 class in the 2027 cycle with five commits thus far.

Contact/Follow @Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions.

This article originally appeared on Ducks Wire: Oregon Ducks to get visit from top-10-ranked KJ Green in April

Where is Nancy Kerrigan now? Inside the Olympic figure skater's life after Tonya Harding scandal

Where is Nancy Kerrigan now? Inside the Olympic figure skater's life after Tonya Harding scandal originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Tonya Harding's attack on Nancy Kerrigan at the 1994 Winter Olympics will forever go down as one of the most shocking moments in Olympics history. 

Kerrigan was famously attacked with a baton in her right thigh on Jan. 6, 1994 at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships, less than two months before the Winter Olympics in Norway. 

Not long after, it came out that American figure skater, Harding, was behind the attack, along with her ex-husband, Jeff Gillooly and bodyguard Shawn Eckardt. 

The man hired to carry it out, Shane Stant, told Inside Edition the plan to take Harding's competitor out was even worse. 

"There was initial talk of cutting her Achilles tendon, which obviously would cripple her," Stant told the outlet. "I didn't think it was necessary. I wasn't willing to do that."

Harding denied any involvement, but was later convicted of conspiracy to hinder a prosecution's investigation into the incident. As a result, she was sentenced to three years probation, 500 hours of community service, and a $160,000 fine. She was also banned from the U.S. Figure Skating Association for life. 

Despite the horrific incident, Kerrigan, 56, went on to win silver at the '94 Winter Games and gained a ton of notoriety from the ordeal. 

Three decades later, Kerrigan's life is very different from the high-pressure world she once lived in. 

Here's what she's up to today. 

Nancy Kerrigan married her agent in 1995

One year after her attack, Kerrigan married her longtime agent, Jerry Solomon, in 1995. 

The couple went on to have children, Matthew, Brian, and Nicole, however, their road to parenthood wasn't exactly an easy one. 

Kerrigan suffered six miscarriages in eight years, which left her feeling like a "failure" and had an impact on her marriage to Solomon, although the two are still happily married today. 

“Since I was 10 years old, I always wanted to have three kids by the time I was 30, sort of like what my mom had done,” the two-time Olympic medalist said back in 2017. "It was pretty awful. You feel guilty. Like, what did you do wrong? It makes you feel like a failure."

The former Team USA figure skater and her husband wound up turning to IVF treatments, which ultimately gave them the three children they dreamed about to complete their family. 

She's continued working in the figure skating community

Kerrigan hasn't stepped away from figure skating completely.

After being inducted into the Figure Skating Hall of Fame in 2004, she went on to serve as a special correspondent during several Olympic Games. She still laces up her skates sometimes, too.

In January, the two-time Olympic medal winner hit up the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in St. Louis and a few months earlier, she took part in the "Holiday Spectacular on Ice," at The Gateway Playhouse in Bellport, New York. 

She also showed off the fact that she's got some skills on the ice in a video promoting an adult ice skating camp shared via Instagram in 2024.  

She competed on 'Dancing With The Stars'

Off the rink, Kerrigan returned to the spotlight in 2017 to compete in the ballroom dancing reality show "Dancing With The Stars."

Partnered with dance pro Artem Chigvintsev, the former Olympic ice skater finished sixth during her Season 24 appearance.

Kerrigan shared an emotional post that year via Instagram after she was eliminated to sum up her experience on the reality show. 

"This picture says so much. I loved my time on #dwts. I will miss everyone involved. You are remarkable! Artem THANK YOU you made it all worth it and special!" she captioned the post. 

She released her first children's book

Kerrigan released her first children's book, "Stranger Than She Thinks," in December 2023. 

The book follows an 8-year-old skater named Nancy, who puts in the hard word and dedication to master her first jump, the axel. 

"So happy for the book for book promise. Hope everyone enjoys and remember we are all stronger than we think," Kerrigan captioned a post shared via Instagram right after the book was released. 

More Winter Olympics news: 

Serena Williams’ tennis comeback: When she can play and the tournaments she could enter

Serena Williams, considered by many the greatest women’s tennis player of all time, will be eligible to compete on the WTA Tour and at Grand Slams later this month.

The International Tennis Integrity Agency (ITIA) has listed Williams, 44, on its roster of reinstated tennis players, with an eligibility date of Feb. 22. The 23-time Grand Slam singles champion initially denied a return to the sport last year after appearing in a tennis anti-doping pool, but has since softened her position, refusing to rule out a tennis comeback during an interview with “Today” in January.

But which tournaments could Williams play in? Would she partner with her sister Venus, the seven-time Grand Slam singles champion with whom she won 14 major doubles titles and three Olympic golds, who has also recently returned? And what has she had to do to make a tennis return possible?

Is Serena Williams returning to tennis?

In public, Williams has moved from a definitive “no” to non-committal.

When Williams’ name was seen in the tennis anti-doping pool last December, Williams posted on X: “Omg yall I’m NOT coming back. This wildfire is crazy.”

But during an interview on “Today” in January, Williams was offered the chance to put the possibility of her return to bed. Instead, she laughed and responded: “If I want to put it to bed … Listen, I want to go to bed — it’s early.”

On both occasions, representatives for Williams did not respond to a request for comment. Then, Feb. 19, Williams posted a cryptic TikTok in which she practiced serves alone on a tennis court for, she said, the first time since 2023.

By reentering the testing pool, and in so doing subjecting herself to tennis’ whereabouts rules, which include accepting the possibility of random drug testing, and remaining in a certain place for an hour a day, Williams gave a huge indication that she is, at the very least, keeping the option open of a comeback. Actively teasing practice videos only deepens that possibility.

She has practiced with Alycia Parks, a fellow American player, and was looking to return as early as last year’s U.S. Open, according to a report in Bounces. At that time, she had not completed the six months in the anti-doping testing pool required by the ITIA for returning players.

Various players told The Athletic last year of the (necessary) strain that tennis’ anti-doping rules puts on them, so it would be an extremely strange move to subject oneself to them unnecessarily.

The strong suspicion is that Williams’ denials and deflections are more because she wants to make any comeback announcement on her own terms. In August 2022, Williams gave a news conference after beating Nuria Párrizas Díaz in the Canadian Open, in which she gave no indication that she was about to announce her retirement. The following day, Williams did exactly that in a first-person piece for “Vogue.”

When is she eligible to compete in tournaments?

From Feb. 22 2026.

The BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells, Calif., gets underway March 4, followed by the Miami Open a couple of weeks later. Both events are WTA 1000s, the rung below the Grand Slams. The next Grand Slam is the French Open, which begins May 24.

If Williams wanted to play Indian Wells but felt she needed some match practice ahead of it, there’s the possibility of entering the ATX Open in Austin, Texas, which begins on Feb. 23. Venus, has already been given a wild card for the event, and she intends to play both singles and doubles.

How will she enter tournaments?

With wildcards. There is no protected ranking for players who have left the sport, and so Williams’ participation, at least until she builds up her ranking, will be at the discretion of the tournaments she wishes to enter.

Given her status in the game, she will have absolutely no issue getting a wildcard wherever she wants. And smaller tournaments will likely be queuing up to offer her hefty appearance fees to play at their events.

How is she preparing for a possible comeback?

Williams still plays tennis regularly at her home in Florida, and world No. 77 Parks told Tennis Majors on Saturday that she had recently practiced with her. Parks added: “She is in great shape. So I think she would kill it on tour.”

Williams has also spoken about the benefit of taking GLP-1 weight-loss drugs since she retired from tennis — more on those later.


When you love something come rain or shine you find a way to enjoy and keep doing it 🥰🥰 pic.twitter.com/ZiNvggzhnW


— Serena Williams (@serenawilliams) December 28, 2024

Will she play singles or doubles, and who with?

It’s unclear whether Williams would go straight into singles or look to smooth the transition by playing doubles first.

There is some precedent for the latter, with Williams opting to just play the doubles at the Eastbourne Open in England in June 2022 as she returned to the sport after a year out with injury, before returning to singles action at Wimbledon a week later.

On that occasion in Eastbourne, Williams teamed up with Ons Jabeur, but the expectation this time around is very much that her partner would be Venus.

The chance to go for a 15th Grand Slam title together, with a combined age of 99, would be hugely compelling.

What do retired tennis players have to do to return to tennis?

The main obstacle is reentering the anti-doping pool for six months, which Williams will have done by Feb. 22. She will then need to remain in the pool, and give her daily whereabouts to the ITIA.

Then it’s a case of trying to clamber up the rankings ladder again — although that’s less relevant for Williams, who will be given wildcards whenever she wants them.

Why did she reenter the tennis anti-doping pool?

Either to return to tennis, to keep the option open of returning to tennis, or because she enjoys updating her daily whereabouts and the prospect of a drugs tester ringing on her doorbell at 6 a.m. asking for a urine sample.

Why would she want to come back to tennis?

Largely because she can, and at 44 surely won’t be able to for much longer. Williams still hits regularly, and will have seen how competitive Venus, now 45, has been on her return to the sport over the last seven months. Why not see if she can be even more so? Especially when her Grand Slam tally of 23 remains one behind Novak Djokovic and Margaret Court’s record, and when she is of the view that she can compete against today’s top players on the women’s tour.

Williams always left the door open for a return — speaking of “evolving away” from tennis rather than retiring when announcing her farewell in 2022 — and with her children a little older, at 8 and 3, she may see this as the right moment and last opportunity. Williams has proven herself the master of the comeback before — returning to the sport after serious injury to win Slams previously, and reaching four major finals after giving birth in September 2017, during which she had a pulmonary embolism.

Williams has also spoken about the benefits of taking GLP-1 weight-loss drugs, and in a series of interviews last summer said that she felt joint stress caused by her weight had prevented her from winning as many Grand Slam titles as she might have done.

Then, a year after her cameo in Kendrick Lamar’s halftime show at Super Bowl LIX, during Super Bowl LX, Williams appeared in a commercial for telehealth company Ro, advertising the effectiveness of the weight-loss drugs. In the advert, Williams delivered a voiceover saying she is “moving better” and “feeling better” thanks to the drugs provided by the company, at one point directly injecting a syringe into her arm. Her husband, Alexis Ohanian, is an investor in Ro and serves on its board.

Are tennis players allowed to take GLP-1 drugs?

GLP-1s were not included on the World Anti Doping Agency’s (WADA) 2026 list of prohibited substances. They are part of WADA’s “monitoring program,” however, meaning the situation could change as more information about the drugs and their effects comes to light.

When was her last match and why did she retire?

You mean, “evolve away.” Williams did so, she said at the time, because she wanted to move “toward other things that are important to me. A few years ago I quietly started Serena Ventures, a venture capital firm. Soon after that, I started a family. I want to grow that family.” Williams has just done that, giving birth to a second child, Adira River, in August 2023.

Williams played her final match in September 2022 — a third-round defeat to Ajla Tomljanović at the U.S. Open, having beaten Danka Kovinić and then the No. 2 seed Anett Kontaveit in the first couple of rounds.

It brought to an end a glittering career that took in 23 singles Grand Slams (the most of any woman in tennis’ professional Open Era), plus 14 in doubles and two in mixed. Overall, Williams won 73 singles titles and picked up just under $95 million dollars in a career that made her one of the biggest icons in the history of professional sport.

Have other major champions made similar comebacks?

Court, Evonne Goolagong Cawley and Kim Clijsters have won titles after childbirth, while Venus has done well since returning to tennis after 16 months out last July. But she’s only actually won one match, and so there’s no real precedent for a player in their mid-40s coming back to the tour and making a big impact.

Martina Navratilova returned to singles in 2002, aged 45, eight years after retiring, and won a match at the Britannic Asset Management International Championships in Eastbourne, England. A couple of years later, she made more of a concerted comeback, but never won more than one match at the five tournaments she entered (plus another in 2005). She reached the latter stages of numerous doubles Grand Slams during this period, and won three mixed-doubles majors — including the U.S. Open in 2006 with Bob Bryan, aged 49.

Should she return, Williams has the opportunity to make yet more history.

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

Sports Business, Culture, Tennis, Women's Tennis

2026 The Athletic Media Company

Swiss women's hockey wins bronze thanks to Money Müller: 'I blacked out'

MILAN - Money Müller started trending on social media within minutes. That's what scoring a beauty of a goal to win a medal can do.

There was 51 seconds left in overtime when she raced into the offensive one on a give-and-go with Ivana Wey, the puck on Alina Müller's stick as she closed in on the net and roofed the puck into Sweden's net and heart.

The 2-1 victory at Milano Santagiulia secured Switzerland the bronze medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics women's hockey tournament. She skated away, flicking off her helmet as teammates rushed to celebrate.

"I know I was tired," Müller said. "I know the legs were heavy. I saw a little opening and just hoped Ivana saw me and she did. She made an unbelievable pass and I just got rid of it as fast as I can. Then I blacked out. Seeing all my friends coming at me, chomping, tears in their eyes. That's a feeling you cannot repeat."

MÜLLER FOR THE MEDAL.🇨🇭
Switzerland wins Olympic bronze in OVERTIME! pic.twitter.com/DZCHQxEz4u

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 19, 2026

Down at the other end of the ice, goalie Andrea Braendli was mentally preparing for a shootout.

"I knew every time Alina has the puck, I'm like, 'Okay, are we getting there?' " Braendli said. "I was just in the moment. I was looking at the puck. I was like, hey, when it comes to my part, I will do my part too and save it.  I was just happy that that went in.

"It's just that mix of emotion, pure joy, but also that relief that you have once that goal hit. It took me a second, honestly, to realize and then I was like, whoa, what do I do now? It was insane."

Müller, 27, was 15 when she won her first Olympic bronze medal, at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

Alina Muller of Switzerland celebrates after scoring the game-winning goal against Sweden during the women's ice hockey bronze medal game during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena.

"Before that, women's hockey was not really existing in Switzerland," Müller said. "Then being so young on that team, seeing how good the other teams are, how good the players are, what athletes they are, I know I want to get there. I want to be there one day. Full circle moment now.

"Every year [women's hockey] is getting more exciting, getting more physical, more athletic, faster game. The stadiums are filling up. Just a few years ago there would have been 100 people in the stands and it's crazy to see."

Processing what she and her teammates have done for women's hockey in Switzerland and elsewhere is for another day. In this moment, about half an hour after she celebrated before a jubilant crowd, Müller just wanted to soak in the moment.

"Honestly, I don't know if I should look at my phone the next 24 hours," she said. "It's probably going crazy. I don't know when I process it. I just want to celebrate with this team and enjoy it."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Alina Müller leads Swiss women's hockey to Olympic bronze medal

Former Patriots Player Brian Hoyer Reveals Death of Sister-in-Law in 'Sudden' Tragedy

Brian Hoyer, Brett Hoyer with his wife Carissa and daughters Ethan Miller/Getty; Brian Hoyer/Instagram
Brian Hoyer, Brett Hoyer with his wife Carissa and daughters

Ethan Miller/Getty; Brian Hoyer/Instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • NFL alum Brian Hoyer revealed that his sister-in-law Carissa died "suddenly and unexpectedly" at the age of 36
  • In a post on social media, he revealed that she left behind his 37-year-old brother Brett and four daughters under the age of 12
  • A tribute to Carissa described her as "was the heart and soul of their home, a steady source of encouragement, faith, warmth, and unconditional love through every challenge and every joy"

Brian Hoyer shared some tragic family news.

The 40-year-old retired NFL quarterback — who played for teams including the New England Patriots, the Las Vegas Raiders and the Cleveland Browns, among others over the course of his 15-year career in the league — shared on social media on Wednesday, Feb. 18, that his sister-in-law Carissa had died "suddenly and unexpectedly" at the age of 36.

"It is with a heavy heart that I write this," Hoyer began his post, noting that Carissa died on Friday, Feb. 13, leaving his 37-year-old brother Brett Hoyer and their daughters, Josie, Lainey, Ellie and Hattie, behind.

Speaking about his brother, Brian wrote, "In an instant, he became a widowed father to four daughters under 12."

Carissa Hoyer Carissa Rae Hoyer/Facebook
Carissa Hoyer

Carissa Rae Hoyer/Facebook

The athlete shared a link to a GoFundMe, which is seeking to raise $100,000 for the family. At the time of publication, it has raised more than $83,000 of its goal.

"Our brother Brett and his four daughters are facing an unimaginable loss. On February 13, 2026, Carissa Rae Hoyer was suddenly called home to the Lord at the age of 36," reads a description of the fundraiser, which was launched by Brian and his brother Matthew Hoyer.

Carissa, known to loved ones as Cari, was described as "a strong and courageous woman who dearly loved her family" and who "cherished the opportunity to build a family of her own."

"She truly felt called to be a wife and mother, and she embraced that role with her whole heart," the tribute read, continuing, "She was the heart and soul of their home, a steady source of encouragement, faith, warmth, and unconditional love through every challenge and every joy."

Speaking of those left behind, organizers said, "The grief is overwhelming, and the road ahead feels daunting. As they face the painful reality of life without Cari, the added financial burden brings even more uncertainty during an already heartbreaking time."

They said that funds will "help ease daily pressures as Brett steps into the role of a single parent."

"Our hope is simple. We want Brett to be able to focus on loving his girls, grieving together, and beginning the long process of healing without the constant weight of financial stress," they said. "We cannot take away their pain, but together we can help carry the weight."

Brian Hoyer playing for the New England Patriots in August 2021 Mike Stobe/Getty 
Brian Hoyer playing for the New England Patriots in August 2021

Mike Stobe/Getty 

In his post on Instagram, Brian added, "If you can find it in your heart to help us help him and his girls through this unimaginable season, we would be forever grateful."

In an update shared on Wednesday, Matthew thanked everyone who had offered support, saying, "There truly are no words to fully express what this means to our family."

Never miss a story — sign up for PEOPLE's free daily newsletter to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

"While nothing can replace Cari’s presence, your generosity is helping lift a burden and provide stability as Brett steps into this new reality of raising four young daughters without their Mother," he wrote.

Additional details about Carissa's death have not been revealed at this time.

In 2024, Brian ended his final NFL contract with the Raiders. He returned to the Patriots as a member of the broadcast team that same year. He now cohosts The Quick Snap podcast with fellow Patriots alum David Andrews.

Read the original article on People

FONDAZIONE MILAN CELEBRATES 23 YEARS OF SOCIAL IMPACT AND LAUNCHES AN INNOVATIVE ACCESSIBILITY SOLUTION

FONDAZIONE MILAN CELEBRATES 23 YEARS OF SOCIAL IMPACT AND LAUNCHES AN INNOVATIVE ACCESSIBILITY SOLUTION
FONDAZIONE MILAN CELEBRATES 23 YEARS OF SOCIAL IMPACT AND LAUNCHES AN INNOVATIVE ACCESSIBILITY SOLUTION

Fondazione Milan is celebrating its 23rd anniversary alongside Alessandra Locatelli, Minister for Disabilities, and Paolo Scaroni, Chairman of AC Milan and Fondazione Milan. On this occasion, the organisation is unveiling a new accessibility project for people with visual impairments, developed together with Sara Assicurazioni, the Club's Official Insurance Partner.

The anniversary event - which also featured the Milan City Councillor for Sport, Tourism and Youth Policies Martina Riva, the Lombardy Regional Councillor Lisa Noja, AC Milan Brand Ambassador and Fondazione Milan Board Member Daniele Massaro, as well as Sara Assicurazioni's Marketing, Brand and Customer Experience Director Marco Brachini - took place today, Thursday 19 February, at the Mondo Milan Museum. To mark the celebration, the room dedicated to the charity's initiatives has been given a refreshed look.

Through photographs and memorabilia, the exhibition traces a story of continuous commitment and evolution, highlighting the organisation's focus on key social issues and its use of sport to drive positive change. Since 2003, more than €13 million has been invested in social projects, directly improving the lives of over 200,000 beneficiaries through 288 initiatives carried out across Italy and in 24 countries worldwide. Starting from Milan and expanding internationally, Fondazione Milan has become one of the most established philanthropic entities in the European sports sector.

With this new project, presented jointly by the charity and Sara Assicurazioni, AC Milan becomes the first club in Italy to adopt Tag System technology, ensuring even greater accessibility at its headquarters and museum for visitors with visual impairments. By scanning more than 50 tags installed throughout Casa Milan and the Mondo Milan Museum - the first museum in Milan and the second in Italy to use this solution - visitors can access contextual, multilingual audio instructions through a free app, helping them navigate the space and immerse themselves in the Rossoneri world.

Designed to meet a specific accessibility need and transformed into an inclusive experience for all visitors, this tool overturns traditional paradigms by strengthening the bond between the Club and its community, reaffirming the headquarters as an inclusive space open to AC Milan supporters, sports enthusiasts, and the city as a whole. This development further enhances the Club's longstanding commitment to inclusion, already recognised as best practice thanks to initiatives such as the audio‑descriptive commentary for matches at San Siro and real-time LIS interpretation of the press conferences for the men's First Team.

"I sincerely thank Fondazione Milan and Sara Assicurazioni for choosing to invest in a new project that places accessibility and human dignity at its core," said Minister Alessandra Locatelli. "The adoption of Tag System technology represents an important step toward a more inclusive society, one capable of breaking down sensory and cultural barriers. Making an iconic place like AC Milan's home fully accessible to people with visual impairments means affirming a fundamental principle: access to sport, culture, and events must be guaranteed to every person. And together, we must continue to work - with ever more courage - toward this goal. Collaboration at every level generates valuable opportunities, as this initiative demonstrates, and it is the path toward building communities that are truly more attentive and welcoming to all."

"Over the past 23 years, Fondazione Milan has become a fundamental pillar of what our Club represents," added Paolo Scaroni, Chairman of AC Milan and Fondazione Milan. "With over €13 million invested and more than 200,000 beneficiaries reached in Italy and around the world, its impact is both tangible and measurable. Today, we celebrate this journey at the Mondo Milan Museum, a symbolic place in our history, together with the Minister for Disabilities, Alessandra Locatelli, whom I thank for her presence. We look to the future with a new accessibility project that brings together technological innovation and social responsibility."

"We are proud to support Fondazione Milan in this important milestone and to have actively helped make Casa Milan and its Museum even more inclusive. As an insurance company, the protection and wellbeing of people are at the heart of what we do, which is why we chose to support the adoption of Tag System technology, enabling architectural and sensory barriers to be removed through digital innovation. Standing alongside the first football club in Italy to implement this solution confirms our commitment to promoting a culture of accessibility that allows every visitor, without exception, to fully experience the passion and history of the Rossoneri," said Alberto Tosti, General Manager of Sara Assicurazioni.

MLS and Copa Libertadores: A Match Made in Heaven or Just a Cheap Payday for CONMEBOL? 

MLS and Copa Libertadores: A Match Made in Heaven or Just a Cheap Payday for CONMEBOL? 
MLS and Copa Libertadores: A Match Made in Heaven or Just a Cheap Payday for CONMEBOL? 

There are rumblings in South America that Inter Miami — and by default Major League Soccer — will be invited to the 2027 edition of the Copa Libertadores. What that means in the long run remains to be seen, but in the short term it feels like just one more stop in the Lionel Messi circus that MLS has become.

When a hamstring injury rendered Lionel Messi unable to play for Inter Miami in a preseason friendly against Ecuadorian side Independiente del Valle in Puerto Rico, the match was simply rescheduled and slotted into the middle of the opening weeks of the MLS season.

Such is the power of Messi that Inter Miami would move a match like this because of his absence. Fans in Puerto Rico were paying top dollar to see the man play, not the team.

Something similar is happening in South America, mainly within CONMEBOL, where president Alejandro Domínguez has a clear wish: to see Messi play at least one Copa Libertadores tournament in his career. According to various sources, that moment is closer than ever: 2027, to be exact.

While nothing is official, the reported spots would go to Inter Miami and one Liga MX team. Taking a page from the expanded FIFA Club World Cup, sporting merit would have little to do with Miami’s qualification to the tournament. It would simply be an invitation for Messi and company.

All of this would ultimately be subject to CONCACAF approval. If and when Inter Miami is formally invited, it would most likely mean that the club could opt out of the CONCACAF Champions Cup, should it qualify, in lieu of the Libertadores due to scheduling conflicts.

That would be a blow CONCACAF may not be willing to take, but may have to swallow, as Messi’s team could sway the powers that be in favor of the famed South American competition.

The reported allocation of two to four additional spots — potentially adding another MLS and Liga MX team — comes amid a proposed format change CONMEBOL is analyzing. The idea would expand the tournament from 32 to 36 teams, aligning it more closely with the evolving UEFA Champions League model, while adding the commercial and star power of MLS and Liga MX.

Photo by Elsa/Getty Images

Inter Miami owner Jorge Mas has been a key voice pushing for his team’s inclusion, but across South America there is significant debate about what these spots would mean for the integrity of the Copa Libertadores.

In a recent interview, Ramón Jesurún, president of the Colombian Football Federation, stated that confederations outside of Brazil and Argentina will once again raise the issue of spot allocation. Currently, Brazil has seven places and Argentina six, while the rest of CONMEBOL receives four each. Jesurún argues that this creates a sporting disadvantage, particularly for Colombia, whose Liga BetPlay Dimayor is often regarded as one of the top three leagues in South America according to the International Federation of Football History and Statistics.

What Would a Copa Libertadores Invite Mean to MLS?

Photo by Hector Vivas/Getty Images

The central question is: How serious is CONMEBOL about including MLS in the Copa Libertadores? Over the past decade there have been repeated rumblings about possible invitations for MLS clubs, yet nothing has materialized. The reality may be that MLS has been hesitant about committing teams to a competition it does not control, especially given the travel demands at a time when its own season is just beginning.

MLS is also set to undergo a calendar change in 2027, which further complicates the evaluation of how MLS teams would compete in the tournament. Currently, Copa Libertadores runs from February through December, which would coincide with the MLS transition season currently scheduled for the early months of 2027. However, if invitations extend to future editions, MLS clubs could eventually participate in midseason form, which is one of the benefits of the calendar switch.

On paper, it is a step in the right direction for MLS to have at least two teams competing in a tournament defined by passion and high-tempo play — environments MLS teams seldom experience. It is arguably past time for MLS to step outside its bubble and compete among the best in the hemisphere. But that comes at a cost. MLS would run the risk of seeing some of its top stars exposed to increased chance of injury or extended absences from domestic competitions if a club were to advance deep into the tournament.

Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images

For CONMEBOL, it is a no-brainer from a commercial standpoint. Having Messi play meaningful matches on South American soil is exactly the kind of spectacle the competition craves. The confederation missed similar opportunities during the MLS eras of David Beckham, Thierry Henry, and Zlatan Ibrahimović.

The bigger concern is what happens post-Messi. Would CONMEBOL remain committed to integrating MLS and Liga MX teams as permanent participants, giving MLS supporters a true opportunity to see their clubs compete in a tournament often mentioned alongside the UEFA Champions League in prestige? Or would CONMEBOL cash in on Messi and then move on?

History of MLS Clubs in CONMEBOL Competitions

The history between MLS clubs and CONMEBOL competitions is limited and, at times, turbulent.

D.C. United competed in the Copa Sudamericana in 2005 and 2007. In both instances, they delivered respectable performances but failed to advance beyond the early knockout rounds.

In the 2001 Copa MercoNorte, the New York/New Jersey MetroStars finished with a respectable 3-3 record in their group but failed to qualify for the knockout stages. Their only on-field win came against Deportivo Italchacao of Venezuela, as their two other victories came in the form of forfeits from Chivas after then-coach Óscar Ruggeri refused to travel to New York due to security concerns following the September 11, 2001 attacks.

Incredibly, CONMEBOL initially intended for certain matches to proceed as scheduled despite the tragedy. Even more controversially, the Kansas City Wizards played a Copa MercoNorte match against Sporting Cristal in Lima on September 12, just 24 hours after the attacks.

Kansas City finished with a 1-1-4 record, becoming the first professional sports team to play a match immediately after 9/11. Former U.S. goalkeeper Tony Meola later told MLSsoccer: “To this day, the biggest regret of my career is not standing up for what I believed in and playing in that game. We were the only American sports team to play on or immediately after 9/11. After the match, we were unable to get a flight out of Lima for three days due to delays and international security restrictions.”

Divided Opinions

Photo by Wagner Meier/Getty Images

Various journalists from around the region shared their perspectives on MLS involvement in Copa Libertadores. Critics of the crossover competition are cynical of its true intentions, and view it simply as another attempt to fatten up the bottom lines of each respective league and confederation.

“Regarding Inter Miami, I prefer sporting merit over commercial and marketing interests,” said ESPN Argentina’s Rosario Pompizzi.

“It doesn’t sit right,” said Uruguayan journalist Brahian Kuchman Bottaro. “These invitations seem driven not by sporting merit, but by marketing — ratings and money. It takes away from the essence of the competition. Why does Copa Libertadores need an MLS or Liga MX team? They already have their own competitions. No CONMEBOL team competes in CONCACAF or UEFA, so why should they?

“I understand the spectacle of seeing Messi or Suárez in Copa Libertadores — there is a show element to it — but beyond that, there is no real sporting justification.”

However, the premise of North American teams entering the South American competition, particularly given the timing, is too tantalizing to pass up on.

“I see many positives beyond the travel — it’s just far, and that’s the only issue,” said Filippo Silva, aka Tactical Manager, a popular football commentator. “I think the top MLS and Liga MX teams are better than most teams in the Libertadores these days. They may still be below most Brazilian clubs, and perhaps behind the top one or two from Argentina or Ecuador, but they would raise the competitiveness of the tournament.

“I don’t think they would be title contenders right away, but they would be knockout stage teams. It would increase the level and definitely bring more money. And yes, if Messi plays, that changes everything. But even excluding Messi, these teams are more competitive than many we’ve seen in recent group stages. In my opinion, it’s a positive for both sides.”

Ronnie Tapia of Soccer View Radio added:

“MLS joining Copa Libertadores would definitely be exciting and would serve as a test for the league — a way to measure ourselves against some of the biggest teams in South America. I think fans would welcome something different instead of the same Leagues Cup matchups year after year.

“With 2026 being such a huge year for soccer in the U.S., it’s the perfect time to have serious conversations about giving the MLS and Liga MX champions a place in Libertadores. That opportunity could push teams to build more competitive rosters, create greater incentives to win MLS Cup, and generate more global exposure.

“In my view, it’s a win-win for MLS, Liga MX, CONCACAF, and CONMEBOL. You’d get compelling matchups, fresh storylines, and clubs that rarely face each other. Ultimately, it means more quality soccer for fans and more to play for.”

Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images

The waters remain divided. For CONMEBOL, which has already been criticized for recent decisions such as the expanded Copa América in the United States and the push to include all 10 South American nations in the 2030 World Cup, adding MLS or Liga MX teams to Copa Libertadores does not sit well with many traditionalists.

In the Northern Hemisphere, however, MLS and Liga MX fans are eager to see their teams compete in passionate competitions against top talent.

Opportunity may not knock again for MLS in CONMEBOL tournaments. Will this be a one-hit spectacle, or the genuine start of a lasting partnership between MLS and South America?

Time will tell. For now, the Copa Libertadores — and its history — could simply be the next major stage in the Lionel Messi opportunity machine.

Golden State Warriors vs. Boston Celtics: Stream, lineups, injury reports, broadcast (2/19)

The Golden State Warriors will come back to action after a long break for All-Star Week looking to get back in the win column this Thursday (Feb. 19) night after dropping a game to a Western Conference foe in their home arena of Chase Center. The Celtics will be looking to remain in the win column after finishing their pre-All-Star slate of games on a high note.

We expect a Celtics win in this contest, but some familiar new additions to the Dubs roster ahead of the 2026 NBA trade deadline could upend any such outcome for Boston if said player is able to play.

Records, standing, and streaks

At present, the Celtics have a 35-19 record, which has them second in the Eastern Conference standings.

Jan 20, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Boston Celtics guard Payton Pritchard (11) and Golden State Warriors guard Pat Spencer (61) battle for control of a rebound in the fourth quarter at the Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images

The Warriors are the owners of a 29-26 record, which has them in the West's eighth-place spot.

What happened in the last game for each team?

Boston beat the Chicago Bulls 124-105 at home.

Jan 20, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Golden State Warriors forward Kevon Looney (5) drives to the hoop against the Boston Celtics in the third quarter at the Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images

The Warriors lost to the San Antonio Spurs 126-113, also at home.

Injuries

For Boston, Jayson Tatum (Achilles) is out.

Jan 20, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) drives past Boston Celtics forward Jaylen Brown (7) in the third quarter at the Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images

For Golden State, Jimmy Butler (ACL), Stephen Curry (patellofemoral pain syndrome), and Seth Curry (sciatica) are out, and Kristaps Porzingis (Achilles) is questionable.

Probable starting lineups - Celtics

  • Derrick White
  • Baylor Scheierman
  • Jaylen Brown
  • Sam Hauser
  • Neemias Queta

Jan 20, 2025; San Francisco, California, USA; Boston Celtics guard Derrick White (9) saves the ball from going out of bounds next to Golden State Warriors forward Andrew Wiggins (22) in the third quarter at the Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images

Probable starting lineups - Warriors

  • Draymond Green
  • Gui Santos
  • De'Anthony Melton
  • Moses Moody
  • Pat Spencer

What time is tipoff, and on what channels?

Here's when you should tune in to see the game:

  • Date: 2/19
  • Time: 10:00 p.m. ET
  • TV Channel: Prime
  • Live Stream: Fubo (watch for free)

This article originally appeared on Warriors Wire: Warriors vs. Celtics: Stream, lineups, injury reports, broadcast (2/19)

Lane Johnson is returning to the Eagles, boosting Philly's O-line

Lane Johnson will continue to anchor the right side of the Philadelphia Eagles offensive line.

Johnson is returning for his 14th NFL season, a person close to the situation confirmed to USA TODAY Sports. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the return.

The Philadelphia Inquirer was first to report the news.

Johnson later posted a picture of himself running onto Lincoln Financial Field in his Eagles uniform.

🦅😤 pic.twitter.com/3yx2K3Lk2I

— Lane Johnson (@LaneJohnson65) February 19, 2026

The right tackle started in 10 games during the 2025 regular season. He missed the final eight games of the season, including Philly’s playoff loss to the San Francisco 49ers, because of Lisfranc foot injury.

What Lane Johnson’s return means for Philadelphia Eagles

Johnson's importance to the Eagles offense is undeniable. He’s a two-time first-team All-Pro and six-time Pro Bowler. He’s been the Eagles’ starting right tackle ever since the team drafted him fourth overall in the 2013 NFL draft.

The impact he has along Philadelphia’s offensive line was noticeable this year. The Eagles offensive line is one of the best units in the league with Johnson manning the right side, but the group is vulnerable without him. The Eagles were 8-2 with Johnson in the lineup and went 3-4 without him during the 2025 regular season.

Pro Football Focus graded Johnson as the fourth-best tackle in the NFL during Philadelphia’s 2024 Super Bowl-winning season.  

Johnson’s return also helps bring continuity along Philly’s O-line. Longtime Eagles offensive line coach Jeff Stoutland resigned this offseason. Chris Kuper is taking over as the team’s offensive line coach. Plus, the Eagles have a new offensive coordinator in Sean Mannion.

Johnson’s current contract runs through 2027. He will be 36 years old at the start of next season.

Follow USA TODAY Sports' Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Lane Johnson to return for 14th season with Philadelphia Eagles

Coco Gauff shares words for Alex Eala faithful following convincing Dubai victory

Photo by Robert Prange/Getty Images
Photo by Robert Prange/Getty Images

Coco Gauff cruised past Alexandra Eala in straight sets, sending the Filipina star out of the Dubai Open.

After a 6-0 opening set and a 4-0 deficit in the second, there were fears she might not get on the scoreboard at all.

Eala did show some resilience to pull a few games back, but Gauff closed it out comfortably, despite much of the crowd clearly hoping for an upset.

Even though most of the support was against her, Gauff appreciated how vocal the fans were for Eala throughout.

Coco Gauff reacts after beating Alexandra Eala

Photo by Christopher Pike/Getty Images
Photo by Christopher Pike/Getty Images

Speaking on court, Gauff rated her performance, having dominated throughout despite a small wobble in the second set.

She said: “It was a bit better today. I could have served a little bit better, but I made it in when it mattered. Alex is a tough competitor, and I knew that she could come back at any given moment. I have seen her do it before.”

The Filipina crowd was clearly the source of that fear, which Gauff went on to acknowledge: “Thank you guys for coming out here. I know you were mostly supporting Alex, but I have to say that it’s great to be on a crowded court. I have played this tournament for many years, and to see the stadium full means a lot.

“Also, I would like to thank Alex for bringing a new demographic to the sport. I really appreciate it. It’s great, I know sometimes it’s tough when you’re playing against a home crowd, but I think it’s great for the sport. So keep being enthusiastic and rooting for your player.”

Gauff explained she used a similar approach in Paris last year when facing Lois Boisson, another match where she was not backed by the home fans.

“I had a similar match at the French Open last year, so I brought that mindset today.

“Whenever you guys were cheering for Alex, I was pretending it was my name, and I think that helped me a lot. If you can’t beat them, join them!

“It’s just confidence and the serve. Just being confident with that shot. Each match has gotten better. I wasn’t in good spirits before this tournament, but one match can change everything.

“I didn’t think I would be in the semis to start the week, but I’m happy that I’m here.”

Alexandra Eala’s remarkable run in Dubai

Eala’s strong showing in Dubai comes at a good time, especially with the Miami Open just around the corner, where she will have points to defend from last year’s semifinal appearance.

It was that run in Miami that first got people talking about her, and she hasn’t looked back since.

Her Dubai campaign started with a win over Hailey Baptiste, who retired early in the second set.

She then knocked out Jasmine Paolini for her third top-ten victory, setting up a meeting with Sorana Cîrstea in the Round of 16.

Facing Cîrstea was no small task, but the 20-year-old handled it well and ended the Romanian’s seven-match winning streak without too much trouble.

While Gauff ultimately proved too strong this time, Eala’s profile continues to rise as she gains more experience against top-level opponents.

Read more:

Michael Irvin had a serious problem with San Francisco hosting Super Bowl 60

Michael Irvin had a serious problem with San Francisco hosting Super Bowl 60 originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Hall of Famer Michael Irvin criticized San Francisco as the worst Super Bowl LX host he’s experienced, urging the league never to return the championship game to the Bay Area.

In a recent YouTube video, Irvin said the game at Levi’s Stadium was overshadowed by a lackluster host-city experience. He described the week as “blah” and said San Francisco “just wasn’t jumping” like a Super Bowl city should.

“This was a horrible Super Bowl,” Irvin said. “They should never ever, ever, ever bring the Super Bowl back to San Francisco. In all the years of going to a Super Bowl, this was the worst.”

Irvin spent the week leading up to the game working Radio Row at Moscone Center and attending league- and sponsor-run events across the city. He said the atmosphere around those festivities, from the streets to the parties didn't match the magnitude of the big game.

“The people, blah. The buildings out here looked blah. When you go into events it was blah,” Irvin said. “I’m thinking there should be so much money out here because the tech is out here, right? But it all looks so blah.”

The three-time Super Bowl champion also criticized traffic and street closures in downtown San Francisco, saying it was nearly impossible to get around during the days leading up to the game.

“I hope the people of San Fran don’t hate me for it, because I’ve had great times here,” Irvin said. “But this, no more. You cannot bring the Super Bowl back here anymore.”

More NFL News

CBS Sports Host Blasts Player Accused of Using Racist Insult: ‘You’re Wrong!’

Kate Scott

Screenshot

CBS Sports host Kate Scott on Wednesday offered pointed criticism on the soccer player accused of hurling racist abuse at Brazilian forward Vinicius Jr.

Moments after Vini Jr. scored for Real Madrid in its Champions League match against Portuguese club Benfica on Tuesday, he was given a yellow card for the way he celebrated. That celebration drew the ire of multiple Benfica players, and the two teams began jawing at one another. At some point during the incident, Benfica winger Gianluca Prestiannisaid something to Vini Jr. with his shirt covering his mouth. Apparently stunned by what he heard, Vini Jr. immediately ran to nearest official to report it. That official then initiated the racist abuse protocol, prompting an on-field investigation into the matter. Play resumed shortly after.

After the match, both Vini Jr. and his teammate Kylian Mbappe claimed they heard Prestianni say something racist. Prestianni has insisted that Vini Jr. misheard him, but he hasn’t confirmed what he actually said through his shirt.

On CBS Sports Golazo, Scott opened the show with a statement urging for change in the soccer community when she said:

Well, I guess today is a new day in football, but with the same old racist problems; and whilst we do wanna focus on the games ahead today — because the game is what we love — yesterday does still linger. And whether or not you like Vini Jr., that shouldn’t shape your opinion on this incident, and which team you support, it shouldn’t affect which side of the story that you fall on. This isn’t Real Madrid versus Benfica. It is right versus wrong. Vini Jr. and Kylian Mbappe said there was repeated racial abuse. Gianluca Prestianni said they misheard, but he covered his mouth to hide what he said from the cameras; and hopefully we can all agree that if what you’re saying on a football pitch is shameful enough to have to hide it from the public, then you’re wrong.

Kate Scott's powerful statement on racism in football ❤pic.twitter.com/kWUvH5Ts05

— CBS Sports Golazo ⚽ (@CBSSportsGolazo) February 18, 2026

Scott took a moment to recognize Black players of the past who also had to endure racism. Then, she singled out Benfica manager Jose Mourinho, who suggested that Vini Jr. is at least partly responsible for the racism harassment he faces because of the way he provokes opposing crowds.

Scott continued:

Jose Mourinho is an iconic figure in world football. Yesterday, he switched the focus from what had actually been said to whether there was provocation for it. He essentially told us that Vini Jr. was asking for it. That is a damaging narrative from a man who is considered a leading figure in the global game.

Football governance struggles globally with racial diversity at its top executive levels, as do UEFA, but we do hope that the lack of Black voices in the room will not mean that Black players continue to go unprotected. Investigation and due process will have to occur. But whatever the results of that in this case, we hope that football becomes a better platform, where hatred is met with more than nominal fines and partial stadium closures, where diversity is truly celebrated, not just tolerated or abused with shirts over mouths.

The racial diversity on a football pitch in the Champions League is the representation of the global love for this game and the global belonging in this game. This is the very spirit of football. And if you don’t agree, then respectfully, you are the one who doesn’t belong.

— —

The post CBS Sports Host Blasts Player Accused of Using Racist Insult: ‘You’re Wrong!’ first appeared on Mediaite.

Where Big 12 teams fall on USA Today's mid-February bracketology

As the Big 12 Conference season draws to a close, the race to make a mark has heated up in the highly competitive league.

USA TODAY's team has put together new bracketology, welcoming an eighth Big 12 school into the fold as one of the last-four-in. If that comes true, the Big 12 would tie the ACC for the third-most teams in March Madness, trailing only the Big Ten and SEC, which each have 10.

After two bad losses a week ago, Oklahoma State dropped out of the last four in contention. Let's take a look at which Big 12 squads made the cut in the latest bracket.

Arizona Wildcats

Feb 18, 2026; Tucson, Arizona, USA; Arizona Wildcats guard Anthony Dell’Orso (3) celebrates during the second half of the game against the Brigham Young Cougars at McKale Memorial Center. Mandatory Credit: Aryanna Frank-Imagn Images

Seed: 1-seed

Region: West (San Jose)

Projected matchup: 16-seeded NJIT or Howard

While not the top seed in USA TODAY's bracket, Arizona has a chokehold over a top seed in the West. The Wildcats reasserted their dominance, taking down BYU on Wednesday after taking their first two losses of the season to Kansas and Texas Tech. Arizona's deep rotation makes them a threat on any night, but they'll have to prove it on Saturday against Houston to maintain their top-seed hopes.

Houston Cougars

Feb 16, 2026; Ames, Iowa, USA; Houston Cougars guard Emanuel Sharp (21) reacts to a call by the officials in their game with the Iowa State Cyclones during the second half at James H. Hilton Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Reese Strickland-Imagn Images

Seed: 2-seed

Region: South (Houston)

Projected matchup: 15-seeded Tennessee-Martin

Previously, the Houston Cougars were the No. 1 seed overall in USA TODAY's bracket, but following a close loss to Iowa State, that promise is no more. Led by star guard Kingston Flemings, the Cougars have limited opponents' scoring all season, making them a favorite in tourney circles. If they can knock off Arizona, look for the Cougars to retake their No. 1 seed from UConn, not only overall, but potentially in their home South region.

Iowa State Cyclones

Feb 16, 2026; Ames, Iowa, USA; Iowa State Cyclones forward Blake Buchanan (23) scores against the Houston Cougars during the second half at James H. Hilton Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Reese Strickland-Imagn Images

Seed: 2-seed

Region: Midwest (Chicago)

Projected matchup: 15-seeded Navy

It will be tough for Iowa State to rise to the level of a 1-seed in the Midwest Region led by Michigan, but the Cyclones are stringing together an excellent end to the season. Aside from the aforementioned win over Houston, the Cyclones clobbered Kansas at home in a game where five Iowa State players scored double figures last Saturday. Their lone bump in the road is a loss to TCU, which they might be able to avenge with a late-ranked win.

Kansas Jayhawks

Jan 20, 2026; Boulder, Colorado, USA; Kansas Jayhawks guard Jamari McDowell (11) reacts in the second half against the Colorado Buffaloes at the CU Events Center. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Seed: 3-seed

Region: West (San Jose)

Projected matchup: 14-seed East Tennessee State

Kansas was one of the hottest teams in the Big 12 last week, fresh off snapping Arizona's 23-game win streak. They're still showing cracks. Losing by 18 to Iowa State isn't ideal, especially considering star Darryn Peterson played 23 minutes and only mustered 10 points. The shaky Jayhawks will have to find some solid ground heading into March if they wish to make a tournament run.

Texas Tech Red Raiders

Jan 10, 2026; Boulder, Colorado, USA; Texas Tech Red Raiders guard Jaylen Petty (11) and forward JT Toppin (15) during the second half against the Colorado Buffaloes at CU Events Center. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Seed: 3-seed

Region: East (Washington D.C.)

Projected matchup: 14-seeded Portland State

The Red Raiders have been inconsistent throughout Big 12 Conference play, with no better example than their overtime win over Arizona, followed by a baffling 5-point loss to a lowly Arizona State team. With the news breaking that Texas Tech will be without star forward JT Toppin for the rest of the season, how they can right the ship following this loss will be key for their seeding moving forward.

BYU Cougars

Nov 15, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) reacts after making a basket against the UConn Huskies during the second half at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Eric Canha-Imagn Images

Seed: 6-seed

Region: South (Houston)

Projected matchup: 11-seeded Miami (OH)

BYU remains a 6-seed amid a disastrous back half of the season, but there's little reason to suspect they stay here. While AJ Dybantsa continues to show out, notching 35 points against Arizona, he's lacked scoring help from his guards. This has led to a 2-5 record in BYU's last seven games, and even those wins, which came over less-than-stellar Colorado and Baylor, were very close. If the Cougars cannot take down Iowa State on Saturday, it would not shock me to continue their freefall in the seeding.

UCF Knights

Jan 24, 2026; Boulder, Colorado, USA; Members of the UCF Knights cheer in the second half against the Colorado Buffaloes at the CU Events Center. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Seed: 9-seed

Region: East (Washington D.C.)

Projected matchup: 8-seeded Saint Mary's

The Knights are quickly growing on me as my favorite underdog seed to root for in the bracket. Themus Fulks leads the high-flying offense that UCF has boasted to an impressive 17-5 record. Although UCF has suffered some bad losses, to West Virginia and Cincinnati, respectively, their offensive firepower should keep them competitive down the stretch. With BYU being the only ranked team left on their schedule, they've got to handle business if they want to ensure an open bid into the big dance.

TCU Horned Frogs

Feb 14, 2026; Stillwater, Oklahoma, USA; TCU Horned Frogs forward Xavier Edmonds (24) passes the ball around Oklahoma State Cowboys guard Anthony Roy (9) during the second half at Gallagher-Iba Arena. Mandatory Credit: William Purnell-Imagn Images

Seed: 11-seed

Region: Midwest (Chicago)

Projected matchup: 6-seeded Arkansas

After knocking off Iowa State and Oklahoma State, TCU joined USA Today's bracketology as a play-in 11-seed. The Horned Frogs have had a rollercoaster season, highlighted by some poor losses to the conference's top teams. On Tuesday, they fell to UCF, which might give them the boot from the predictions unless they can bounce back in their final five games with a statement win over Texas Tech.

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This article originally appeared on Buffaloes Wire: Big 12 basketball bracketology update from USA TODAY sports

#23 Minnesota Gophers Upset #10 Ohio State Buckeyes 74-61

The Minnesota Golden Gophers women’s basketball team remained on a roll after upsetting #10 Ohio State 74-61 at Williams Arena on Wednesday night. The Gophers have now won nine games in a row—their second longest Big Ten winning streak in program history only behind the eleven in a row the 2003-04 team won en route to the Final Four that season. It was Minnesota’s first win over the Buckeyes since 2016 and puts them currently alone in 4th place in the Big Ten standings with just two games remaining in the regular season.

The Gophers got off to a bit of a slow start against the Buckeyes before dominating the final 25 minutes of the game. The Gophers took a 14-11 lead but then allowed the Buckeyes to close out the first quarter and the start of the second quarter on a 12-0 run to extend their lead to 23-14 with 7:48 to play in the second quarter. The nine point lead would be the biggest the Buckeyes had the rest of the way as Minnesota began chipping back slowly across the rest of the second quarter. A quick 6-0 run cut the Buckeye lead to three at 23-20, and the teams traded baskets the rest of the way allowing for Ohio State to take a three-point lead into halftime 29-26.

Minnesota needed to find their offense at halftime. The Gophers only trailed by three and shot an abysmal 27.5% in the first half including just 2-0 from beyond the arc. Ohio State was successful from three shooting 45% , but Minnesota had limited the damage. The game was in their hands if they could execute.

And execute they did in the third quarter. Minnesota dominated the Buckeyes in the period starting on a 9-0 run. Ohio State tried to limit the damage, but the Gophers kept coming and coming and would outscore the Buckeyes 27-13 in the quarter to take a 53-42 edge into the final ten minutes. The Gophers found their shot shooting 66.6% from the field and 4-6 from beyond the arc in the quarter.

That trend would continue in the fourth quarter. The Gophers jumped out with a 7-2 run again and stretched their lead to sixteen points at 60-44. Minnesota slowed down some committing a few bad turnovers and missing some easy shots allowing OSU to get back in the game. The Gophers weathered some Buckeye runs and answered with huge shots of their own. After Ohio State got the lead down to seven with 3:38 to play it was Mara Braun with a huge three to push the lead back to ten. One last Buckeye push cut the Gopher lead to six with 2:08 to play, but the Gophers stars were not going to let this one slip away. After Amaya Battle had her shot blocked she grabbed the rebound and called timeout with just 3.8 left on the shot clock. The Gophers worked up a perfect play out of the timeout and found Braun for a wide open jumper to go up eight. The Buckeyes came down and missed a jumper with some great defense by Tori McKinney. Battle picked up the rebound and the Gophers showcases some great ball movement skipping it across court to McKinney who drove and got stopped and fed Sophie Hart in the high post who found a wide open Grace Grocholski at the top of the key who drained the dagger three to lock up the game.

GRACE FROM DOWNTOWN AND THE BARN CAN FEEL IT 🍿

📺: B1G+ pic.twitter.com/Sj2TiRPZPQ

— Minnesota Women's Basketball (@GopherWBB) February 19, 2026

A pair of missed Buckeye shots and a pair of Braun free throws later, the celebration was on after the massive upset victory.

ANOTHER TOP 10 WIN? YOU BETCHA!!!! pic.twitter.com/Kiag7FJ7eW

— Minnesota Women's Basketball (@GopherWBB) February 19, 2026

Cellys caught in 4K🎥 pic.twitter.com/Su61A8KyK4

— Minnesota Women's Basketball (@GopherWBB) February 19, 2026

Minnesota’s stars came out to play in the game. Hart and Battle each finished with double-doubles. Hart scored 18 points and added 10 rebounds, five of which were offensive. Battle finished with 13 points and a team high 12 rebounds. She also added five assists, and with her pass to Brun for a three-pointer in the third quarter passed Lindsay Whalen for #2 in the all-time Gopher assist list.

Braun added 18 points to lead the way along with Hart, and Grocholski added 12 and McKinney nine. In our three keys preview post we said that the Gophers needed to do three things. First keep Buckeye star Jaloni Cambridge in check. Cambridge did score 23 points, but on a very inefficient 10-27 from the field. McKinney played magnificent defense on the Buckeye star and limited her influence on the game.

Secondly the Gophers needed to deal with the Buckeye full court press. They did then mostly successfully as well. OSU got a couple of steals on their full court pressure, but Minnesota only committed nine turnovers—two less than their average and 12 less that the Buckeyes opponents were averaging this season. The Gophers actually flipped the script forcing 11 OSU turnovers, and more importantly scoring 17 points off of those turnovers compared to just 10 for the Buckeyes.

Thirdly the Gophers needed to rule the boards and get second chance opportunities. They absolutely dominated this aspect of the game. Minnesota outrebounded Ohio State 47-32 and recorded 15 offensive rebounds compared to the Buckeyes seven. Minnesota scored 17 second chance points compared to six from OSU—that’s your winning margin right there. The Gophers dominated the paint again outscoring OSU 32-16. That’s how Minnesota wins.

With the win the Gophers now sit in fourth place in the Big Ten standings at 12-4. They have just two regular season games remaining—hosting #18 Michigan State on Senior Day at The Barn on Sunday and then finishing out at Illinois on Sunday March 1st. Ohio State sists in 5th place at 11-4, but the Gophers will own the tiebreak over the Buckeyes for fourth place. Iowa sits ahead of Minnesota at 11-3, but again the Gophers would own the tiebreak with the Hawkeyes. Iowa finishes the regular season at Purdue, and home against Michigan and Illinois. The third seed in the Big Ten Tournament is in reach if the Gophers can close out with a pair of wins to stretch their winning streak to 11—which would tie the all time Big Ten winning streak the 2003-04 and 2004-25 teams achieved.

The win also moved Minnesota up to #8 in the NET rankings which help decide the NCAA field. Minnesota is a lock to make the field at this point, but is still jockeying for seeding. Prior to the Buckeye game the Gophers were looking at either a five or six seed, but if Minnesota can win out, a four seed is very much a possibility. Why is a four seed so huge? If the Gophers can earn a four seed they would host the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament at Williams Arena. A huge advantage for this team as they head into March Madness.

The next step is adding one more home ranked win. #18 Michigan State comes to the Barn on Sunday for Senior Day where the Gophers will honor Hart, Battle, Finau Tonga, Brylee Glen and Tracy Bershers. Hopefully they can close out the regular season in successful fashion and make sure those five ladies get at least one more home game.

Mariners Reacts Survey: World Baseball Clash

Last time we spoke, we wanted to hear from you, the reader, about spring training. As we all know, the roster gets crunched in the spring, crushing dreams, occasionally ending careers, and dashing the hopes of young prospects everywhere. We all know how it goes. One of the items we discussed was who stands to gain the most from spring training. See the results below: 

Of course, this is more of a moot point now because Williamson has since been traded, but what can you do, right? For those of you who voted for Williamson, I respect your commitment and hope to see him break out; maybe he can do that for the Rays, ideally not against the Mariners. 

Of course, that still leaves us with our second-place winner, Cole Young. The opportunity is certainly there for Young, and the overwhelming thing I hear from people here at LL and out on the streets (conversations with my brother) is that the spot is his if he’s willing to reach out and take it. While I think this downplays the presence of Ryan Bliss, I agree that Young is the best positioned to be the starting second baseman on Opening Day. 

We also wanted to hear from you on which players needed to make a big step forward this year, and the results were more contentious: 

In particular, the conversation in the comments centered on Canzone. Seems people are disagreeing on how much time Canzone should get to really show he’s ready to be a roster mainstay. While Canzone has shown flashes at times, how many at-bats are you willing to cede to maybe see him do something great with the ball? I know where I stand. I’m willing to see how it plays out in spring, but I’m more than ready to see the end of the Canzone experience. 

This week, we have the WBC around the corner and spring training, but I’m more interested in talking about the WBC, especially with so many Mariners participating this year. The question comes to mind, what Mariners will do best at the World Baseball Classic? 

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the MLB. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Mariners fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Unfortunately, the polls are limited on space, but feel free to shout out your favs in the comments. Personally, I think Julio is going to tear it up; plus, I’m hopeful that a hot WBC could lead to a hot April. Historically, Julio has been a bit of a slow starter, so seeing him get the early-season jitters out with the Dominican Republic and then tear it up for the Mariners would be incredible. But let us know your thoughts in the poll and the comments below!

Yankees' Aaron Judge breaks projection models for 2026 MLB season

Yankees' Aaron Judge breaks projection models for 2026 MLB season originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Aaron Judge is too good for the projection models.

The New York Yankees' superstar is as good as it gets in baseball, coming off an MVP season, and likely to be one of the best players in MLB again.

Before each season, statistical models predict what's going to come in the new campaign. 

On Thursday, MLB.com shared projected top players for each team this season, and Judge is projected in that for 7.3 Wins Above Replacement.

That's despite Judge coming off two seasons in a row with 10-plus WAR.

Simply put, the systems can't handle Judge.

"Judge is hitting .326 with a 1.152 OPS since the beginning of the 2024 season," MLB.com writes. "He hit 58 home runs in 2024 and followed with 53 in '25. He's coming off back-to-back 10+ WAR seasons, and now he's a batting champ, too. Projection models aren't built for this, so although he does have the highest projected position-player fWAR in baseball, it's just as likely an MVP-worthy 43-homer, 7.8-WAR season is underestimating him, even in his age-34 campaign."

MORE: There's one question Pirates phenom Konnor Griffin needs to answer

Projections take into account all the possible positive and negative outcomes. They're meant to hit a middle outcome, not the upside necessarily.

Judge has too much upside for the models. He's too good.

He might be the greatest right-handed hitter of all time. So that makes him an unprecedented projection in a lot of ways.

It's safe to expect Judge to be special yet again. That's simply what he does at this point.

Eventually, time and age may catch up with Judge. Doesn't seem that way yet, though.

More MLB news:

Patriots projected to add playmaking WR in latest 2026 NFL mock draft

The New England Patriots could utilize additional playmakers on offense, and NBC Sports Boston’s Phil A. Perry predicted who they would select with the 31st overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.

In his first mock draft of the year, Perry has the Patriots taking Texas A&M wide receiver Kevin Concepcion with the 31st overall pick. Concepcion is an explosive playmaking wideout who recorded 61 catches for 919 yards and nine touchdowns in his final year with the Aggies. He averaged 15.1 yards per reception.

The former SEC star also made his mark as a return specialist. He led the SEC in punt return yards with 460 yards on 25 returns. Perry, who believes that Concepcion would fix the Patriots' need for another playmaker, wrote:

"His quickness as a route-runner and burst with the ball in his hands are outstanding. Combine those traits with an innate feel for open spaces and a refusal to go down upon first contact, and you have a potential game-changer in Josh McDaniels' offense."

The Patriots have multiple directions they could go with their first-round pick. A younger, playmaking wideout would help the team continue to build the offense around Drake Maye. They could also add help up front on the offensive line or even go after a much-needed edge rusher on defense.

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This article originally appeared on Patriots Wire: Patriots projected to add playmaking WR in latest 2026 NFL mock draft

Guardians to try position change for Steven Kwan after four-straight Gold Glove awards

Guardians to try position change for Steven Kwan after four-straight Gold Glove awards originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The Cleveland Guardians didn't have an active offseason, but they did extend Jose Ramirez, and now they might be getting a new center fielder.

Except, it's not an external option, and instead a possible position switch for one of the best fielders in Major League Baseball in recent years.

According to Zack Meisel of The Athletic, the Guardians are going to experiment with Gold Glove award winner Steven Kwan, getting him reps in center field this spring to evaluate their outfield configuration.

Guardians to experiment with Steven Kwan in CF

"New development: Steven Kwan will play some center field this spring," Meisel reports, "as the Guardians try to sort out their best outfield alignment."

What makes this such an interesting decision from the Guardians is that Kwan, since his MLB debut in 2022, has won four straight Gold Gloves in left field.

The four-year outfielder has never gone a season without being the best left fielder in the American League. Moving Kwan, who's won a Gold Glove in 100% of his seasons in the Majors, to a new position is a risky switch.

Other than Kwan in the outfield, the Guardians have George Valera, Chase DeLauter, Nolan Jones, and Johnathan Rodriguez as outfield options for 2026.

MoreMLB Hot Stove tracker: Live updates on news, rumors, signings and trades for 2025 free agency

If Kwan sticks in left field, DeLauter will likely take over in center field. While he's not a bad fielder, the Guardians' moving their best fielder to the most important outfield position is, in theory, a good idea.

But, there's a big risk that Kwan could struggle in center field, which would make the position switch a very bad decision for the Guardians.

Kwan is a great fielder and likely will be just fine in center field. But, compared to being the best defensive left fielder, the drop off might not be worth the risk for Cleveland.

This is only an experiment, and isn't a final decision just yet for the Guardians. But it's a very interesting storyline to follow along with this spring as the 2026 regular season approaches.

More MLB news:

Mick Doohan hopes Liberty Media can return MotoGP to its ‘glory days’

Photo by Mark Sutton - Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images
Photo by Mark Sutton - Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images

Since taking over last year, Liberty Media haven’t been popular with everyone in the sport, but Mick Doohan thinks their arrival could be just what MotoGP needs.

The switch from Phillip Island to a new Adelaide street circuit hasn’t gone down well, and there’s already plenty of debate about how the track will handle the conditions and whether it will suit the championship.

Former racer Keith Huewen was blunt in his assessment, calling it a “tragic” decision. He’s far from alone, with many fans voicing their disappointment over the loss of one of the sport’s most iconic venues.

Even so, there’s a sense that MotoGP could benefit from the kind of commercial growth Formula 1 has seen under Liberty Media. In that respect, Doohan is supportive of where things might be heading.

Mick Doohan backs Liberty Media to help MotoGP reach its ‘glory days’

Photo by Jayce Illman/Getty Images
Photo by Jayce Illman/Getty Images

Mick Doohan thinks the influence of Liberty Media can be a good thing for MotoGP. The American media company, which also owns Formula 1, took control of the sport in April last year.

And even though F1 has faced its share of critics since that change, there’s no denying the numbers have improved across key metrics. It’s now one of the top three sports globally by revenue, alongside Formula E and NASCAR.

Appearing on the Racing Back podcast with MotoGP icons Nick Harris and Julian Ryder, the five-time world champion was asked for his thoughts on the future of the premier class with Liberty Media now at the wheel of the series.

“Look, who knows? They’ve done great things with Formula 1, that’s for sure,” Doohan said.

“So, if we can get a little bit of that into motorcycling, get a revival back to the old glory days, even though the sport’s doing quite well.

“But to try and get more eyes on bikes I think can’t be a bad thing, especially trying to recover some lost ground over decades from America and then likewise in Britain.”

MotoGP is hoping it will see similar success in time – but growing tensions between Dorna Sports chief Carmelo Ezpeleta and FIM president Jorge Viegas haven’t helped matters behind closed doors.

Ezpeleta recently told Gazzetta dello Sport: “The relationship has not changed because we never had any. I will continue to work as before.”

MotoGP expected to see more changes from Liberty Media following Australian GP move

Phillip Island’s removal from the premier class schedule has sparked plenty of frustration, but it may only be the beginning as MotoGP’s new owners look to reshape the series.

Several F1-inspired rule changes have already been discussed. KTM is one of the teams pushing for a cost cap to help bridge the gap between well-funded factories and those with fewer resources.

One idea that could be implemented soon is an F1-style team radio system.

Some riders have already had a chance to test it. Marc Marquez was one who noted that it might not be necessary for motorcycle racing.

Ducati teammate Francesco Bagnaia was among those who tried out the new radio system and pointed out that there will be an adjustment period as riders get used to it.

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Jabari Walker discusses conversion to standard deal, return to Sixers

PHILADELPHIA -- The Philadelphia 76ers finally made the decision to convert Jabari Walker from two-way deal to a standard one as they now can have the big man dress for games again. After reaching his 50-game limit on his two-way deal, Walker was unable to dress for the final four games before the All-Star break as coach Nick Nurse had to get creative with his bench unit.

Now, back with the Sixers on a new deal, Walker is ready to get back on the court and help the team succeed. He is a guy who brings his hard hat to work every day and is a guy willing to do a lot of the dirty work for Philadelphia--as well as a hunger to just play the game he loves.

"I think being out the last four games just shows how much I really care about this team and being on the court," Walker said at shootaround on Thursday morning. "At some point, it was like ‘Man, I’ll go out there and play for free. Forget the money.’ I just wanna impact and continue to have what he had going on, so it just feels good to kinda get that off my back and be in a situation where I can connect with the guys, get some practices under my belt, and be back with the group."

On the season, Walker is averaging only 3.7 points and 3.1 rebounds, but those numbers go up to 10.9 points and 9.1 rebounds per 36 minutes. Being a reserve player for this group, he brings a ton of energy and is somebody the Sixers can rely on to bring it on a nightly basis.

He spent some of his All-Star break recharging, but he also had to stress out a bit about his current contract situation. He is happy that the conversion is done and he can focus on the Sixers again.

"I was around family," Walker said of his break. "Around some friends and spent some time worrying a little bit about being back out here waiting for this moment. Now, I don’t gotta stress about it."

The Sixers will take on the Atlanta Hawks on Thursday looking to get back in the win column after two losses before the break.

This article originally appeared on Sixers Wire: Jabari Walker discusses conversion to standard deal, return to Sixers

Arsenal may be punished for the scenes after brawl at full time against Wolves

Arsenal may be punished for the scenes after brawl at full time against Wolves
Arsenal may be punished for the scenes after brawl at full time against Wolves

Arsenal and Wolves players clashed at full time during their frustrating 2-2 draw last night, and both clubs could now face disciplinary action from the Football Association. Arsenal were widely expected to secure victory and appeared in control for significant periods of the contest, having established a 2-0 lead.

However, Wolves responded strongly after the interval, scoring twice in the second half, including a stunning effort and a late equaliser that derailed Arsenal’s plans. The turnaround proved a major disappointment for Arsenal supporters, many of whom had been confident their side would see out the match without difficulty.

Late Drama Sparks Confrontation

Tensions escalated dramatically after Wolves netted their second goal. At the final whistle, a mass confrontation broke out involving players from both sides. The scenes suggested that emotions had boiled over following an intense encounter, with frustrations clearly evident among members of both sides.

Both clubs appeared unable to contain their players during the incident, increasing the likelihood of formal action. Such altercations routinely attract scrutiny from the governing body, particularly when multiple players become involved in post match confrontations.

(Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)

Arsenal Expect Possible FA Charge

According to Football Insider, Arsenal now expect to be charged by the footballing authorities for failing to control their players during the altercation. Any sanction could add further pressure at a pivotal stage of the season.

Every fixture has taken on added significance for Arsenal as they attempt to maintain their pursuit of the league crown. The psychological burden of remaining in contention has been evident, particularly given previous campaigns in which their title challenge ultimately fell short.

This season represents a significant opportunity to secure the title. However, as matters stand, the latest setback against Wolves, combined with the potential for disciplinary consequences, has introduced fresh uncertainty into their pursuit of success.

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Arne Slot already has his perfect Ibrahima Konate replacement lined up

Arne Slot already has his perfect Ibrahima Konate replacement lined up
Arne Slot already has his perfect Ibrahima Konate replacement lined up

Charlie Cresswell is the perfect player for Liverpool to replace Ibrahima Konate with

Charlie Cresswell has long been linked with Liverpool but recently, their interest has seemed to re-emerge.

The Englishman is on the shortlists of many clubs around the world with some Premier League teams even making a move for him last summer.

In the end, the former Leeds United ace chose to stick it out with Tolouse and now, the Reds are chasing after him.

According to Sports Boom, Cresswell would only cost around £26 million for Liverpool to buy which, compared to the £55 million they've just spent on Jacquet, is very minimal.

This means that his transfer would be very low-risk for the Reds and, even if he did end up flopping, they'd likely get the vast majority of their money back, which, with any signing, is all that a club could ask for.chiesa

Charlie Cresswell ticks many of Liverpool's boxes for centre-backs

The fact that Cresswell would be classed as a homegrown player for Liverpool will massively play in his favour.

One of the main problems that Slot has faced this term is being unable to register certain players for certain competitions due to the registration rules.

Players such as Federico Chiesa were even left out of the Reds' Champions League squad until Giovanni Leoni got himself injured which proves how close to the wire things are getting.

In addition to his homegrown status, Cresswell's height and ability to score a goal are just two of the other reasons why he'd be an ideal signing for Slot.

While playing for Tolouse, he's often used as the central centre-back in a back three which means that he can play on either side of the defence.

Of course, there's still time for things to change and potentially go up in the air, but, the fact that these links have re-emerged makes it feel like Cresswell's arrival could be just around the corner.

Sébastien Pocognoli: “Show a united and collective mindset.”

Sébastien Pocognoli: “Show a united and collective mindset.”
Sébastien Pocognoli: “Show a united and collective mindset.”

Two days ahead of the clash against Ligue 1 McDonald’s leaders RC Lens at the Stade Bollaert-Delelis (17:00), the AS Monaco coach spoke about the stakes of the match in the pre-match press conference.

Continue the current momentum. Unbeaten in their last four league matches (2 wins, 2 draws), AS Monaco are eager to maintain this solidity as they travel to face league leaders RC Lens on Saturday afternoon (5:00 p.m.). Ahead of Matchday 23 clash in Ligue 1, coach Sébastien Pocognoli appeared before the media. Excerpts. 🎙️

We’re also trying to give the squad the right workload in training, while taking mental recovery into account as well. It’s about finding the right balance depending on the work that needs to be done in order to prepare for the match. I think the second half of the season will be decided on the mental aspect, so we’re working on that.

He’s going to have two or three important training sessions, especially since he completed a very good full session with the reserves yesterday. If on Sunday he reaches the same level with the players who didn’t feature against Lens, then we’ll have the green light to give him fresh confidence for the second half of the season, and I hope he’ll be able to show how important he can be to the team. Without forgetting the suspensions of the two players (Vanderson and Golovin), which are already confirmed.

The need to rotate?

We try to make the best decisions to be as consistent as possible in the medium term. That’s been the case since I arrived here, in a situation where we had to manage injured players, some of whom suffered relapses, so we have to be mindful of that history. But we also try to maximise the training load, taking mental recovery into account as well. We have to find the right balance depending on the workload involved in preparing for matches. I think the second half of the season will be decided on the mental aspect, so we’re working on that. We have to stay optimistic and positive, because that’s the best way, in my opinion, to build momentum in the best possible way.

Regarding the clash against Lens

We’re taking it one game at a time, because the schedule means we have a tough week ahead in terms of opponents. We’re traveling to face the Ligue 1 leaders on Saturday, who are very strong at home (10 consecutive wins). Then we go to the Champions League title holders on Wednesday. So it’s a great challenge for us, one we’re approaching with optimism, as I said before the first leg against PSG at home. That’s the key word, even though we’re going into this clash with a reduced squad and some uncertainty, but we’ll try to find the best solutions, because we still have some. In any case, we’ll need to show a strong team spirit and solidarity.

The first leg of the Champions League playoff against Paris

There were mixed feelings after the match , because our approach was right and the players did what we wanted. On paper, we were playing against a very strong team, and yet there were regrets about how the match unfolded. So it was a mix of hope, pride, but also disappointment. Then, going back to the locker room, it’s up to us to choose a side, and the coaching staff has to provide that impetus. We decided to address what had disappointed us before moving directly on to what was coming next, because for me, making that mental shift to a positive mindset was crucial.

Yesterday, the starting players had their day off, others played a friendly match with the Elite Group (Jules Stawiecki, Samuel Nibombé, Ilane Touré, Stanis Idumbo, and Paris Brunner), and the substitutes had a very intense individual training session of excellent quality. Normally, it’s a tough session the day after a match for those who haven’t played much, but this one was very good, which shows that the whole group is committed. Today we met up for the first time and laid the groundwork for the next match.

The similarities between Lens and Union Saint-Gilloise

There are indeed many similarities between Lens this year and Union last season, whether in terms of their system, style of play, or player profiles, based on our analysis of RC Lens. There’s also a lot of enthusiasm around the team, especially as they are top of Ligue 1. I don’t know how their campaign will end, but in any case, their fate is in their own hands, and they have the opportunity to achieve something great by the end of the season.

We’ll do everything we can to play our game, show ambition, and also respond to their strengths. I don’t know if their streak will continue, but Saturday’s match will demand a lot of physical consistency from us. In any case, they play with a lot of intensity, partly due to the players’ profiles

Sébastien PocognoliThe type of match against Lens

They’re a team with strong momentum at home, but they also have areas we can exploit. We’ll do everything we can to play our game, show ambition, and also respond to their strengths. I don’t know if their streak will continue, but Saturday’s match will demand a lot of physical consistency from us. In any case, they play with a lot of intensity, partly due to the players’ profiles. As for the title? The team that is the most consistent over the course of the season will come out on top.

On the reverse fixture in the Principality

Lens has many players with a high success rate in high pressing, especially in midfield, even though we are the second-best team in France at this level. So we will try to maintain that, because it’s part of our DNA. In the reverse fixture, we had a coherent first half, but we conceded two easy goals. We also had good passages between the lines with the ball at our feet, creating chances, but we were undone by an unfair red card that completely dashed our hopes of getting back into the game. On the other hand, we were already facing a team that is strong in converting opportunities.

Pressing? It depends on the profiles we have, even though we can maintain a certain philosophy and some principles. We’re missing quite a few players in attack, but we’ll always try to stay consistent with what we aim to do. Against PSG, when we were 2‑0 down, we dropped back a bit, which was unfortunate because I would have liked us to keep pushing, but we eased off a little after the penalty, which I think was a setback. So we need to try to stay consistent depending on the team we can put out.

What type of match against the Sang et Or?

We’re going to play against a very strong team at home, so possession will most likely be on their side. But we always try to be dominant with or without the ball, because we try to be as dominant as possible. Against PSG, we didn’t manage to play as we wanted; at times, we might have been too direct. At Lens, there will probably be more transitions, but we’ll see – it will depend on how both teams play.

Message to the players

I always try to be as ambitious as possible and, above all, consistent with our ambitions, because sometimes, when we’re disconnected from reality, we can lose the confidence of those around us. I’m always in favour of optimism and aiming as high as possible. We need to be consistent, and if we are, we’ll have a chance to qualify for Europe, so my motto is to believe as much as possible. Unfortunately, we have to deal with factors that can affect this ambition, notably the many absences, but if we stay united and think the same way in both good and bad moments, we can try to carve a path in the final stretch to achieve something positive.

This year, the risk factor is much higher, with many different player profiles and system changes forced by the numerous absences, which means we have to make risky decisions.

Regarding recent red cards

This is a question I’ve been asked a lot this year, so I hope I won’t have to answer it anymore. There are different factors that explain it: one is the desire to be aggressive but in the wrong way or not using it wisely. The second is physical, although that was more the case several months ago. Then, if we talk about the one we had against Lens, there were also some decisions that went against us. Regarding the most recent one given to Golo in the league against Nantes, it was out of context. Depending on the referee’s interpretation, some wouldn’t have given it, others would. That said, I agree that there are too many red cards, which makes it very difficult to find a consistent starting XI to build understanding and continuity – something that, for me, is the guiding principle.

I spoke with Golo, as I do with every player after a situation like this. I communicated with him after the game, then we let yesterday pass to discuss it more calmly and with more perspective today. He is aware that it wasn’t good for the team, even though there was no intention to harm the collective, since he had been very important recently in the goals scored in recent matches. That makes it all the more frustrating, because he was decisive in this more central role. This red card was understandable, even if he just wanted to get past the player – it comes down to a split second. But against Nantes, we expect better emotional management from him.

The starting XI against Lens

I think we’ve been consistent in many ways we approach out matches, even though there’s always some self-reflection and an element of risk in the decisions we make. Last year at Union, I took fewer risks, simply because when a player was injured, there was someone with the same profile on the bench. This year, the risk factor is much higher, with many different player profiles, system changes forced by numerous absences, which means we have to make risky decisions. However, in important matches or against top teams, we have always maintained the right approach, except for the game against Real Madrid. For Lens, I need to wait for the medical check-ups for Maghnes and Denis, but the system and tactical setup are already well established in my mind.

I’ve never experienced it as a player or as a coach, so I’m looking forward to discovering this great atmosphere, in a mining region that reminds me of the area I come from in Liège and my family roots. It’s a match I’m eagerly anticipating, and I hope it will be a great evening for our team because if that can be combined with the atmosphere, it will be fantastic.

On the atmosphere at the Stade Bollaert-Delelis

I think their success this year comes from the collective, as there’s a great synergy between the staff, the players, and the fans. The stadium? I’ve never experienced it as a player or as a coach, so I’m looking forward to discovering this great atmosphere, in a mining region that reminds me of the area I come from in Liège and my family roots. It’s a match I’m eagerly anticipating, and I hope it will be a great evening for our team because if that can be combined with the atmosphere, it will be fantastic. One thing is certain: it’s tough for any team to go there.

Landon Harmon is one of several breakout candidates in the Washington Nationals farm system

In 2026, the Nats are not likely to make a ton of progress at the MLB level, at least when it comes to wins and losses. However, we should see Paul Toboni’s new plan lead to quick results at the minor league level. The Nats have several breakout candidates in their system. One of them is 19 year old RHP Landon Harmon, and I wanted to chat about him today.

Harmon was selected in the third round of the 2025 draft, but was given a $2.5 million signing bonus. That is way above slot value, and shows the Nats valued Harmon like an early second round talent. The industry also viewed him that way, with MLB Pipeline ranking Harmon as number 48 prospect in his class. 

After getting drafted last year, Harmon did not appear in any professional games, which is very common for high school pitchers. That means this will truly be his first pro season. Heading into this year, he has a lot of buzz behind his name. Fangraphs mentioned him as a guy who could be a top 100 prospect a year from now. MLB Pipeline also ranked him in the top 10 of the Nats system.

Picks to Click: Who We Expect to Make the 2027 Top 100 https://t.co/NAkmngu426

— FanGraphs Baseball (@fangraphs) February 19, 2026

Now that we know the level of hype he has, let’s dive into what makes the Mississippi high school righty such an intriguing arm. His bread and butter is his fastball, which consistently gets plus grades. Pipeline has it as a 65 grade pitch and BA put a 70 on his heater. That makes it easily a plus pitch, with plus-plus upside.

The heater has everything you want. Harmon throws very hard, sitting in the mid-90’s. However, he can run that heater up to 98 or 99 MPH when he wants to reach back. When you look at his slender 6’5 frame, there is also more velocity to dream on. He could be a pitcher who touches triple digits one day.

However, it is more than just the velocity that makes Harmon’s fastball great. The pitch also has explosive life and comes from a flat approach angle. This makes his heater look even quicker than it is. It also has a bit of cutting action at the end as a little cherry on top. He was able to blow the fastball by even good high school hitters like Ethan Holliday at showcase events.

Possibly the best pick of the 3rd round in the 2025 MLB draft, the Nationals signing RHP Landon Harmon.

65-grade Fastball
55-grade Slider

Changeup could use some improvement, but at 6-ft-5, the 19-y/o's ceiling is incredibly high.

Here's him vs. the No. 4 pick Ethan Holliday… pic.twitter.com/pF9EvlwAzC

— Tobey Schulman (@tschulmanreport) December 25, 2025

The heater gives him a strong foundation to build on, but there are also some interesting breaking ball shapes here. He throws both a sweeper and a harder slider. Neither are outstanding right now, but they both have above average potential. The fact he already has the ability to spin multiple different breaking ball shapes is also a positive indicator. It indicates a feel for spin and an ability to experiment. 

The changeup is admittedly a work in progress right now. He did not need to use it much as a high schooler because he could overwhelm hitters with his fastball and sliders. When he did throw it, the pitch was not anything special. However, at 19 years old, Harmon has plenty of time to find an off-speed pitch.

You can teach that, but you cannot teach Harmon’s size and fastball quality. Those building blocks make him a strong candidate to be a top 100 prospect in a year. They have some differences, but Harmon reminds me of Travis Sykora after he got drafted. Both have outstanding stuff and a better feel for pitching than most kids their age. 

Sykora obviously had a massive year in 2024, becoming a top 100 prospect. He was on his way to being one of the premier pitching prospects in the game before having to go under the knife in 2025. Harmon could be on a similar trajectory given his talent level.

There is already footage of Harmon at Spring Training throwing a bullpen. I do think it is a bit notable that we have seen him, but not guys like Miguel Sime or Coy James yet. It may mean the Nats are more comfortable letting Harmon be seen by the public due to feeling he is more advanced. 

#Nationals 2025 3rd round pick Landon Harmon, 19, is throwing absolute gas for strikes this morning. pic.twitter.com/5o0mDWJIUh

— Ryan Shenker (@RyanShenker) February 17, 2026

Another indicator to see what the Nats think of Harmon is how they assign him. If they send him straight to Low-A, that means they have a high level of confidence in him to produce right away. If they think he is a bit raw, they will have him make starts in the FCL. 

Harmon should spend most of the season in Low-A, but he might get a taste of High-A if he dominates with the Fred Nats. I think that is in the cards due to the quality of his stuff. He is also a guy who should be helped by the Nats new development team. Harmon is a big ball of clay for those pitching gurus to work with. Hopefully, they can turn him into a high end prospect.

€45m midfielder on Chelsea’s radar after Bundesliga success – Blues need to see Essugo first

€45m midfielder on Chelsea’s radar after Bundesliga success – Blues need to see Essugo first
€45m midfielder on Chelsea’s radar after Bundesliga success – Blues need to see Essugo first

Felix Nmecha is another top young star who could soon return to the Premier League, with Manchester United and Chelsea being linked.

You’ve got to hand it to Man City. While Chelsea’s academy remains the best of the best, as the years go by the number of elite players produced by City continues to increase.

A lot have to move away to succeed – Morgan Rogers, Cole Palmer, and Felix Nmecha. The 25 year old German international moved to Wolfsburg and then Dortmund, where he’s now in the form of his career. It’s no surprise to see Chelsea linked with him.

CaughtOffside say that the midfielder is a target for Man U, Chelsea and Spurs. Dortmund “rate him highly”, but we all know they’ll sell at the right price, and a number around €45-55m is reported here.

Felix Nmecha not a natural fit for Chelsea transfer strategy despite quality

Felix Nmecha in action or Borussia Dortmund. (Photo by Christof Koepsel/Getty Images)

This doesn’t feel super likely to us. At 25 and with a high valuation, Nmecha is not a natural fit considering the type of players we usually sign. We might make an exception for a truly elite star, or someone available for a lower fee, but at the moment Nmecha doesn’t really tick any boxes.

While we do need to add a midfielder, we first need to see what Dario Essugo can offer us after his first campaign was wiped out by injury.

In other transfer news…

Fellow Man City academy star Morgan Rogers would be a dream signing for most Chelsea fans, but he’s now being linked with Tottenham. Can you really see Spurs spending £100m on a player though? That’s what Villa may want…

Liam Delap continues to be linked with a move away from Stamford Bridge, but we really don’t see it as likely just yet.

Check out the latest edition of Simon Phillips’ SPTC podcast here:

Tony Alford calls new U-M offense 'wild,' unlike anything he's seen

There has been a changing of the guard in Ann Arbor, with Kyle Whittingham taking over the Michigan football program after having spent decades at Utah. But we won't have a good idea of exactly what it will look like until we see the Wolverines in action.

But given the philosophical similarities from the previous staffs, it won't be an overhaul as much as it will be a mix of a culture change as well as tweaking the identity of the extant team. As much as fans and media can draw conclusions of what the new look will be, or even the players, the best barometer is that the one returning coach on the staff is particularly enthusiastic about the changes that are being made.

Running backs coach Tony Alford is the sole holdover from Sherrone Moore's regime to Whittingham's, and he told Jon Jansen on the In the Trenches podcast that he's excited about what Whittingham brings to the table.

"Pro’s pro. He’s a pro’s pro. There’s not a lot of BS. This is what it is," Alford said. "Here’s what we’re doing. Here’s what we’re doing. And here’s the direction we want to be in. And here’s the process of doing that. And, again, there’s not a lot of gray area, right? This is what it is, which I like. And that’s been very good. The staff’s awesome.

"You know, for me, it’s kind of wild when a new staff comes in. I’ve been a part of those transitions before in 32 years of coaching. And if you’re one of the lone holdovers, you kind of look like you kind of got leprosy a little bit. But these guys, they’ve been phenomenal. Like, hey, what do you think? What about this? And they’ve had a highly, highly, highly productive offense where they’re coming from. And so even when I’m trying to give some input, I say, yeah, well, what about this? They’re like, well, yeah, that makes sense. Or, no, we’ve done it this way, but is there a better way? And so they’ve been very, very receptive. They’re just ball coaches, right? We just want to get better. And they’ve been great and really good staff. I’m very impressed."

Alford will be operating within the confines of the Jason Beck offense, and though it has philosophical similarities -- it's run-heavy and physical at the point of attack -- it's not exactly old school.

He delved deeper into what makes Beck and his offense different, noting that it isn't like anything he's ever seen before, and he thinks that it plays right into the hands of the talent that the Wolverines already have in Ann Arbor.

"Yeah, it’s wild because the way they call it, I’ve never seen it," Alford said. "I’m like, wait a minute, what are you doing here, right? But the more I’ve studied it in constant conversation with the staff, I love it. The way it pieces together, I think it’s very user-friendly to learn, especially that it allows young players to get up and play fast.

"I think it’s a dynamic offense because we’ve got enough playmakers here that you can put guys in spots and match up issues, and it’s very easily adjusted where multiple guys are going to touch the ball and have the ability to touch the ball. I think, Bryce Underwood, I think with his skill set. So I think this leads to all the different weapons that we have; we can use them, and they’re at our disposal in a lot of different ways. Just how creative can we be in order to get those guys open in space. So it’s going to be fun."

Michigan will start spring ball on March 17 with eyes on the April 18 spring game at The Big House.

This article originally appeared on Wolverines Wire: Michigan football: Tony Alford on Whittingham's 'wild' new offense

💥New row: La Liga appeals decision on Rayo-Oviedo

💥New row: La Liga appeals decision on Rayo-Oviedo

The tension between Spanish football institutions has erupted once again. LALIGA has issued a strong statement following the recent decision by the RFEF's Sole Competition Judge, claiming that this resolution violates the current legal framework. The conflict arises from the suspension of the match between Rayo Vallecano and Real Oviedo, due to the poor condition of the playing field.

LALIGA defends its organizational autonomy

According to the organization led by Javier Tebas, the authority to set, modify, or suspend schedules and dates of professional matches belongs exclusively to LALIGA. The institution relies on recent rulings from the Supreme Court and the National Court, which confirm that the RFEF does not have the power to review these organizational decisions. LALIGA argues that the suspension of the match in Vallecas was a necessary measure to ensure the physical integrity of the players after receiving unfavorable technical reports.

Appeal underway and precedents

The statement highlights that the new date for the match was set after consulting both the clubs involved and the Federation itself. Therefore, LALIGA has announced that it will file an appeal against the judicial resolution, trusting that it will be overturned for disregarding a common and legally established practice. This new institutional clash adds uncertainty to the Spanish professional football calendar while awaiting a final resolution.

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here.

South Carolina Lawmakers Debate Legalizing Online Sports Betting

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South Carolina lawmakers are weighing a proposal to legalize online sports betting, setting up debate over regulation, revenue, and social impact. A legislative subcommittee spent nearly two hours reviewing the bill before opting to continue discussions, according to WACH.

Key Takeaways

  • South Carolina lawmakers are debating legalizing online sports betting despite opposition from Gov. Henry McMaster.

  • Supporters said betting activity is already occurring without state oversight or tax revenue collection.

  • Opponents warned that legalization could increase addiction and financial harm, particularly among young men.

Trevor Hayes of Caesars Entertainment told lawmakers that betting activity is already taking place within state borders.

He said data from Caesars indicated legal operators began accepting bets from South Carolina residents in late 2024, but South Carolina is not receiving the tax revenue. Hayes added that Kalshi processed more than $10 billion in handle in a single month, highlighting the scale of activity operating outside state regulation.

Sen. Josh Kimbrell, a Republican from Spartanburg County, said approximately 415,000 South Carolinians hold betting accounts and travel to neighboring North Carolina or Tennessee to place wagers. He argued a regulated market would eliminate illegal activity and provide oversight while stressing that he does not support broader gambling expansion, such as introducing casinos in the state.

Gov. Henry McMaster previously warned that expanded gambling could lead to further growth beyond sports betting. His office reiterated that his position remains unchanged and that alternative revenue options should be explored.

Opponents, including members of Palmetto Family Alliance, told lawmakers that men ages 18-29 are particularly vulnerable to gambling-related harms, including bankruptcy and poor credit outcomes. This may ultimately influence the bill's movement, with lawmakers hearing the testimony but not voting on the initiative.

Other jurisdictions advance proposals

Hawaii lawmakers have also moved forward with sports betting legislation. The Hawaii House Economic Development and Technology Committee advanced HB 2570 by a 5-3 vote despite significant opposition from the attorney general's office, Honolulu police, and the Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs.

The Hawaii bill would authorize at least six online sportsbooks at a 15% tax rate. Its listed effective date of July 1, 3000, allows additional time for negotiations. The proposal must now clear two more House committees before reaching the floor.

Last year, similar legislation stalled in conference committee after disagreements over tax rates and licensing fees, though Gov. Josh Green indicated he would have signed the measure.

Elsewhere, Wisconsin lawmakers have continued discussions on whether to allow tribes to offer online sports betting. Indiana advanced a bill banning sweepstakes casinos and granting the Indiana Gaming Commission expanded enforcement authority.

Maryland lawmakers reviewed measures targeting problem gambling and reintroduced legislation to legalize online casinos. Washington senators approved a bill permitting tribal casinos to accept wagers on in-state college teams, excluding player prop bets.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Darryn Peterson’s bizarre injuries at Kansas, explained as best we can

LUBBOCK, TEXAS - FEBRUARY 02: Darryn Peterson #22 of the Kansas Jayhawks is introduced before the game against the Texas Tech Red Raiders at United Supermarkets Arena on February 02, 2026 in Lubbock, Texas. (Photo by John E. Moore III/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Darryn Peterson was supposed to be the best of a loaded freshmen class in men’s college basketball this season. Instead, the Kansas Jayhawks guard has spent his one-and-one year battling several lingering ailments that have either kept him out of games entirely or limited his availability to just the first half. The program has been vague about exactly what Peterson is dealing with, and the situation is only getting weirder as March Madness approaches.

Peterson was in the lineup on Wednesday night against Oklahoma State, and put together a typically dominant showing when he was on the floor. The guard finished with 23 points in 18 minutes, but took himself out of the game early in the second half with Kansas up big in a game they would win easily. Here’s the moment where Peterson subbed himself out with 17:22 left in the second half after making a three-pointer that put Kansas up 13 points:

Darryn Peterson had 23 points in 18 minutes

A couple minutes into the second half he signaled to Bill Self that he’s ready to hang it up for the night.. pic.twitter.com/qUqSnsQuyp

— The Jump Sports (@TheJumpSports) February 19, 2026

Peterson did not return, and Kansas won 81-69. The Jayhawks are 20-6 on the season, 10-3 in the Big 12, and entered this week at No. 8 in the polls.

After the game, Kansas coach Bill Self talked about Peterson’s exit and sounded as surprised as anyone else.

“We’ve had this happen more than a couple times,” Self said. “I didn’t anticipate that at all tonight. I thought he was good to go. We only got 18 minutes out of him. That’s disappointing because he could have had a really big night. It’s happened often enough that our guys have learned to play without him, even if that’s not the way we want to play.”

Here were Bill Self's initial thoughts after the win:#kubballpic.twitter.com/BvDJzkbxrd

— Jordan Guskey (@JordanGuskey) February 19, 2026

Self is as smooth as it gets among college basketball coaches, but you can hear the frustration in his voice. The head coach repeatedly called Peterson the best player he ever recruited leading up to the season. Peterson has been excellent when he’s been on the floor, averaging 43.8 points per 100 possessions on very efficient 62.8 percent true shooting. The issue is that he hasn’t been able to stay on the floor.

Kansas has played 26 this year. Peterson has played 15 of those games, but he’s only played 30+ minutes in six of them. The situation the Jayhawks found themselves in against Oklahoma State — Peterson playing outstanding basketball until he checked himself out early in the second half and didn’t return — has played out so many times this season.

Peterson has dealt with a hamstring strain, an ankle sprain, a quad injury, and constant cramping issues. As it’s happened, the star guard has earned a new nickname: D(n)P. What’s actually wrong with Peterson? Here’s what we know.

Darryn Peterson’s injury issues and cramping, explained

Peterson played the first two games of the year for Kansas in a win over Green Bay and a loss to North Carolina. Then he missed seven games with what the team called a hamstring injury. He made his return against rival Missouri on Dec. 7, and played 23 minutes in a blowout win. He only played six minutes in the second half, and was seen getting treatment on the bench throughout the game after halftime. Peterson played 31 minutes in a win over NC State in the next game, then missed the next two games against Towson and Davidson with what the team called cramps.

Peterson returned on Jan. 3 against UFC, scoring 26 points in 23 minutes, but he checked out for good with about 11 minutes left, and Kansas would go on to lose. Here’s how Bill Self explained it after that loss:

“Darryn—who I wanted to put on a minutes restriction, that’s what we had talked about…I really couldn’t do it in the first half and we paid for it in the second half because obviously his legs started bothering him again,” Self said. “So that was disappointing. We were going to do the minutes restriction around 24 minutes and he ended up playing about that but he played way too many in the first half. We were playing so poorly and he kept us in there.”

Things got even more strange in the next game against TCU. Peterson tried to check himself out late in the second half during a play, and it led to a Kansas turnover. The team would go on to win without him, but Peterson did check back in to make the game-tying free throws that sent the game to overtime.

This Darryn Peterson situation feels specifically designed to make people (especially emotional college sports fans) lose their minds. He asks out of the game mid-play with 2:30 left leading to a Kansas turnover, and immediately exits. I can't remember anything like this before. pic.twitter.com/bGYVVQNNXk

— Ricky O'Donnell (@SBN_Ricky) January 7, 2026

Peterson has missed two games since: he was out Jan. 24 in a win over Kansas State with an ankle sprain, then missed the Feb. 9 game against No. 1 Arizona with flu-like symptoms after warming up. In another bizarre twist, a text from someone sitting courtside went viral that indicated Self told him to play if he was going to play, or otherwise sit. So he sat.

Self has stood up for his player all season to this point in the face of mounting criticism over his lack of availability. Here’s what he said after the Arizona game:

“I’ve read some of the narratives out there about (Peterson) and it’s really not remotely true. When you’re honest, people don’t believe you and when you don’t comment on it, people create their own narratives,” Self said Thursday. “Was his hamstring legit? Hell yes. Was his cramping legit? Yes. Did he turn his ankle bad? Yes… He’s had a string of bad luck. Those narratives are BS.”

Self summarized the situation saying Peterson was dealing with a “string of bad luck,” and continued here:

“The thing about it is, when you’re honest, people don’t believe you,” Self said. “And when you don’t comment on it, people create their own narratives. And you know what? I do the same thing about things I don’t know about: ‘Well, it must be this. It has to be that if they’re not going to talk about it.’”

While Peterson has scored extremely well all year, the injuries have sapped some areas of his game that shined in high school. Peterson looked like an elite defensive playmaker for an offensive star back when he was at Prolific Prep for his senior season. As a freshman, he’s posted a 2.6 percent steal rate and 2.2 percent block rate, which are passable numbers, but nowhere near where they were expected. Peterson also hasn’t been much of a playmaker, recording only 11 assists in 11 Big 12 games. He wasn’t expected to be a great facilitator entering the year, but his 12.6 percent assist rate is really low for a player of his caliber, and I would have thought that number would be 25-ish percent coming into the year.

Peterson just hasn’t had the same juice attacking the basket that he showed in high school. He’s only attempted 40 shots at the rim this season compared to 62 non-rim two-point attempts. His three-point volume was thought to be a concern entering the year, but instead he’s taken as many threes (102) as he has twos (102) to start this year.

Peterson has still been a deadly scorer because his shot-making is incredible. It’s easy to fantasize about him getting 100 percent physically, and then looking like the downhill demon and stout defender he was promised to be coming into school. That sounds great in theory, but it would be nice to see him actually play.

Darryn Peterson doesn’t need Kansas, but the NBA would still love to see him play

The 2026 NBA Draft is loaded with Peterson, Duke’s Cameron Boozer, and BYU’s AJ Dybantsa sitting at the top of the class. I’ve had Boozer ranked as the best player in the class from the start of the season, with Peterson at No. 2. It seems like NBA scouts are higher on Peterson than Boozer, and he’ll likely compete with Dybantsa to go No. 1 in June.

Peterson looks like some combination of Anthony Edwards and Devin Booker when he’s healthy. Many people have suggested there’s even some Kobe to his game:

Darryn Bean Bryant pic.twitter.com/cWMc5ZUDqy

— Ricky O'Donnell (@SBN_Ricky) December 7, 2025

The reality is we haven’t seen the best version of Peterson at Kansas yet. He was supposed to be a dominant rim scorer, a game-wrecking defender, and a solid playmaker. So far, he’s looked mostly like an efficient microwave scorer who doesn’t do much passing or defending. A team that takes Peterson in the top-three of the NBA Draft will want to know why he hasn’t looked as good as he did in high school this year, and that means he’ll have to explain his injuries.

Yes, this is an awesome draft class … but how many guys are you really taking over Peterson? Boozer and maybe Dybantsa, sure. But Caleb Wilson? Kingston Flemings? Keaton Wagler and Mikel Brown Jr.? The peak version of Peterson would push Boozer for the No. 1 player in the class in my eyes, but even this diminished version of him is still too enticing to pass on him for anyone else. I’m keeping him at No. 2 on my board, but it would be great to see him actually prove he can be durable.

Peterson could shut it down right now and still be a very high NBA draft pick, possibly No. 1 overall. If he really doesn’t want to play for Kansas anymore, he doesn’t have to. From the school’s perspective, just getting Peterson healthy for March is the biggest priority. Of course, he hasn’t been healthy all season, so it seems like a stretch that’s ever going to happen. Peterson can be the best player in March Madness if he wants to be, and if his body will allow it to happen. At this point, it seems foolish to expect his availability to significantly change before the end of the season.

Hamstring injuries are a lot scarier than they might sound. Scoot Henderson missed 51 games recovering from a hamstring injury this year. It’s easy to say Peterson should just tough it out and play through his issues, but it’s not as easy as it sounds.

Kansas needs Peterson more than Peterson needs Kansas. He’s still a lock to be a top-three pick in the NBA Draft regardless how he finishes this season. What NBA teams will really want is clarity on what’s actually wrong with Peterson, and that’s something no one has had all year. College basketball’s strangest story seems to get murkier every week, and there’s about to be more attention on it than ever before with March Madness only a few weeks away.

Daytona 500 viewership up from rain-delayed 2025 race, though a downward trend continues

Viewership for the 2026 Daytona 500 rebounded from 2025, but was still lower than previous regularly-scheduled races in recent years.

Fox Sports said Thursday that nearly 7.5 million people watched Tyler Reddick’s win on Sunday. That’s an increase from the 6.76 million people that watched the 2025 Daytona 500, but that race was delayed significantly by rain. Last year’s event completed just eight green-flag laps before a rain delay of over three hours stopped the race.

Sunday’s race was moved up an hour because of potential rain, and started just after 2 p.m. ET instead of after 3 p.m. ET.

With the 2024 Daytona 500 pushed to Monday because of rain, the last regularly-scheduled race came in 2023. That race, won by Ricky Stenhouse Jr., averaged 8.17 million viewers. In 2022, the Daytona 500 drew over 8.8 million viewers.

Daytona 500 viewership has been on a steady decline since 2006, when Jimmie Johnson’s win drew over 19.3 million viewers. Kurt Busch’s win in 2017 had an average audience of 11.9 million and no Daytona 500 since then has gotten close to breaking 10 million.

In 2018, Austin Dillon’s win had 9.3 million viewers and Denny Hamlin’s win a year later had 9.2 million.

Did moving up Sunday’s race mean fewer viewers ended up watching? That’s an unknown. It’s possible, but the earlier 500 also meant it didn’t run head-to-head with the NBA All-Star Game as much as it was scheduled to originally. The All-Star Game drew its highest audience since 2011 on Sunday with 8.8 million viewers.

The game, aired on NBC after the network’s daytime Olympic coverage, drew 4.1 more million viewers than the 2025 All-Star Game on TNT.

Merch leak prompts rumors of Titans rebrand

As the Tennessee Titans move toward opening a new stadium, they could end up with another new look.

Fanatics recently posted an image of a plush football with what appears to be a possible new Titans logo. The folks at the TicTacTitans Twitter page preserved it before it was deleted.

The revised logo goes with a more basic "T", no flames, and a lighter blue.

The Titans had no comment on the situation to the Tennesseean.

Previously known as the Oilers, both before and after the move from Houston, the franchise changed its name to the Titans in 1999.

They've undergone various tweaks to their uniform and helmet. Currently, the base helmet is dark blue.

The Titans are due to open a new stadium in 2027.

Nordic combined skiers may have competed in their final Olympics

TESERO, Italy (AP) — Nordic goodbye?

It could be the last Olympics for a sport that mixes the grace of ski jumping with the grind of cross-country skiing.

Nordic combined events at the Milan Cortina Games ended Thursday. And the International Olympic Committee is considering scrapping it from future Games because of a small TV audience and podium positions dominated by a tiny group of nations.

As if to illustrate that point, Norway swept took gold in all three events — including Thursday's men’s team sprint — and the same countries stood on the podium at all three Nordic combined events at these Winter Games.

“Hopefully these three events have been fun to watch and I think it has been a lot of nations fighting for their medals,” Jen Luraas Oftebro, who won three golds, said after sharing the win with teammate Andreas Skoglund. “Hopefully the IOC will see the value in that.”

Nordic combined was invented some 150 years ago when a Norwegian crown prince seeking glory as a champion paired the two disciplines he excelled at.

The contest opens with a daredevil ski jump to determine the starting order for a lung-busting cross-country ski race.

“Nordic combined is such a beautiful sport and I think it deserves much more popularity because I think the races are really, really fun to watch and the athletes are doing amazing,” said Jan Vytrval, a Czech competitor. “It deserves much more than to be deleted from the Olympics.”

The sport has been included since the first Winter Games in 1924, but it is the only winter sport that doesn’t include women. Female athletes who compete on the World Cup tour and in world championships have lobbied hard to change that.

But their fate is tied to the larger sport.

The IOC has previously put off a decision on the sport's future but will revisit the question after the Games wrap up Sunday.

“If it stays, it’s for both,” said Lasse Ottesen, the Nordic combined director of the International Ski Federation. “It makes no sense to say, ‘Yes, we’re just going to have the Nordic combined men in or, yes, we're going to take the men out and we’re going to throw the women in.’ I mean why would anyone do that in these times?”

Ottesen said FIS had exceeded requirements the IOC set out in 2022, increasing the competition in the women’s sport and building media interest globally. While audience numbers grew slightly over each of the last three Olympics, he conceded it was not as much as FIS expected.

Two of the three events — the men’s individual normal hill jump and large hill ski jump competitions that were each followed by 10 kilometer ski races — sold out all 4,500 tickets allocated and 90% of the team event tickets were sold, Ottesen said.

But, he added, the cross-country venue has twice that capacity, so it “looks a little bit thinner.”

FIS President Johan Eliasch attended the Feb. 11 normal hill event with IOC President Kirsty Coventry to try to showcase the excitement that two disciplines generate.

IOC member Ingmar de Vos, a member of the committee reviewing the fate of the sport, attended the large hill event.

The contests in the last three Olympics were won by Norway, Austria, Germany and Japan. In Milan Cortina, Germany and Japan — despite starting two of the races in first place after the jump — were shut out as Finland took two individual bronzes and a team silver.

That is progress in the eyes of the sport’s supporters — and the Finns, who gave a thrilling chase for the silver medal on Thursday.

“We have done our part with competing,” said Eero Hirvonen, who won an individual bronze and shared the silver with Ilkka Herola. “We have had really interesting competitions here and I think all the attention with what our success and medals have got in Finland ... I hope it helps.”

___

AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

More lethal than Jasprit Bumrah? Ex-India captain makes big claim on Varun Chakravarthy

Former India captain Kris Srikkanth has backed Varun Chakravarthy as India’s most dangerous weapon at the moment, even suggesting that the mystery spinner is proving more lethal than Jasprit Bumrah in the ongoing T20 World Cup 2026. Srikkanth also expressed surprise that Varun is not receiving the recognition he deserves.

Varun has been in exceptional form, claiming nine wickets in four matches at an average of 6.88 and an economy rate of 5.16. In India’s game against the Netherlands, he returned outstanding figures of three for 14 from three overs.


Interestingly, in the 21 matches where Varun and Bumrah have featured together, the spinner leads the wicket tally 30-22. Speaking on his YouTube channel, Srikkanth said that batters are still unable to decipher Varun’s variations.

“Look at the pitch maps — most of his deliveries are around off-stump and middle-stump. Against right-handers, the ball just angles in slightly and then turns. His googly comes in sharply. Most of his wickets are from good length or just short of good length. Not even full deliveries. Even his so-called short balls are deceptive.”

“People don’t know what he’s bowling. Is it a googly? Is it the straight one? Is it slower? Is it quicker? No one knows. Suddenly he bowls one faster. Then he changes speed again. Multiple speeds. Long run-up, relaxed action — but incredibly deceptive.”

“Frankly speaking, he doesn’t get enough credit. Bumrah is fantastic. You won’t easily find a bowler like Bumrah," said Srikkanth.

Although Shivam Dube was named Player of the Match against the Netherlands, Srikkanth felt Varun was equally deserving.

“Today, yes, Shivam Dube played a blinder and deserved Man of the Match. I’m not denying that. But if you look at Varun’s figures — three wickets for very few runs, all top-order wickets — why wasn’t he even considered a contender for Man of the Match? No one even thought about it,” he said.

Since making a comeback after an underwhelming start to his international career, Varun has taken 47 wickets in 27 matches across 2024 and 2025. In 2026 alone, he already has 13 wickets from seven games. Srikkanth believes that if India lift the trophy, Varun could well be Player of the Tournament.

"Hundred percent (he can be the Player Of The Tournament). Because of consistency. In every match he plays, even on a bad day, he gives away only 34 or 35 runs. For a spinner, four overs for 36 runs is absolutely acceptable in T20 cricket. But within that, he still takes one or two wickets.”

“He’s casually delivering match-winning performances. But he’s not celebrated enough,” said Srikkanth.

The former chief selector went a step further, calling Varun a modern-day great in the format and comparing his current impact to what Bumrah delivered in T20Is a few years ago.

“Varun, you are a modern-day great. I’m telling you honestly from my heart — not because you’re Tamil, not because you’re from Tamil Nadu or Chennai. No. Purely because of ability. Every batter is struggling. They don’t know how to face him. They don’t know whether to defend. They don’t know whether to attack. They don’t know what to do against him.”

“That’s exactly what Bumrah used to be a couple of years ago. Bumrah is still doing brilliantly," said Srikkanth.

Varun will next feature in India’s Super 8 encounter against South Africa on Sunday, February 22.

2026 Cy Young Odds: Lopez Injury Looms Large in Minnesota

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And here come the injuries.

Minnesota Twins right-hander Pablo Lopez was seen as a fringe contender for the American League Cy Young Award at +5000 before news broke that he had a torn UCL. While Tommy John surgery hasn't been confirmed, and he is seeking a second opinion, 2026 could be lost before it even starts for him. 

Those in search of a sleeper pick will have to cross Lopez off their lists as a result.

As camp ramps up, keep an eye on the latest MLB odds for the 2026 MLB Cy Young races.

Odds to win AL Cy Young award 2026

PlayerDraftKings
Tigers Tarik Skubal+350
Red Sox Garrett Crochet +425
Rangers Jacob deGrom+1300
Royals Cole Ragans+1300
Astros Hunter Brown+1300
Yankees Max Fried +1700
Mariners Bryan Woo+2000
Mariners Logan Gilbert+2000
Tigers Framber Valdez +2200
Guardians Gavin Williams+2500
Orioles Kyle Bradish+3000
Twins Joe Ryan+3000
Blue Jays Dylan Cease +3500
Red Sox Ranger Suarez +3500
Yankees Carlos Rodon +4000
Orioles Trevor Rogers+4000
Blue Jays Kevin Gausman +4000
Rangers MacKenzie Gore +4000
Rangers Nathan Eovaldi+4000
Mariners George Kirby+4000
Angels Jose Soriano+4500
Mariners Bryce Miller+5000
Yankees Cam Schlittler+5000

Odds last updated on 2-19.

Odds to win NL Cy Young award 2026

PlayerDraftKings
Pirates Paul Skenes+225
Dodgers Yoshinobu Yamamoto+500
Phillies Cristopher Sanchez+1000
Braves Chris Sale +1400
Reds Hunter Greene +1400
Dodgers Blake Snell+1800
Giants Logan Webb+2000
Phillies Zack Wheeler+2000
Braves Spencer Strider +3000
Dodgers Shohei Ohtani+3000
Brewers Brandon Woodruff+3000
Mets Freddy Peralta +3000
Phillies Jesus Luzardo +3000
Brewers Jacob Misiorowski+3000
Mets Nolan McLean+3500
Dodgers Tyler Glasnow+3500
Padres Michael King+4000
Padres Nick Pivetta+4500
Reds Nick Lodolo+4500
Marlins Eury Perez+4500
Pirates Mitch Keller+5000

Odds last updated on 2-19.


Covers MLB betting tools


Previous Cy Young Award winners

Here are the last 10 winners of the AL and NL Cy Young Award, with Detroit, Cleveland, Houston, Washington, and the New York Mets each leading the way with two. Overall, the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers have the most Cy Youngs all time (12), followed by the Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves with eight and the Philadelphia Phillies, Boston Red Sox, and Mets with seven apiece.

Previous AL Cy Young winners

YearAmerican League Winner
2025Tigers Tarik Skubal
2024Tigers Tarik Skubal
2023Yankees Gerrit Cole
2022Astros Justin Verlander
2021Blue Jays Robbie Ray
2020Guardians Shane Bieber
2019Astros Justin Verlander
2018Rays Blake Snell
2017Guardians Corey Kluber
2016Red Sox Rick Porcello

Previous NL Cy Young winners

YearNational League Winner
2025Pirates Paul Skenes
2024Braves Chris Sale
2023Padres Blake Snell
2022MarlinsSandy Alcantara
2021Brewers Corbin Burnes
2020Reds Trevor Bauer
2019Mets Jacob deGrom
2018Mets Jacob deGrom 
2017Nationals Max Scherzer
2016Nationals Max Scherzer

Pitchers with multiple Cy Young awards

Twenty-two pitchers have won multiple Cy Young Awards, led by Roger Clemens' seven trophies. Of those 22 winners, five are still active in the majors.

PitcherNumber of Cy Young Awards (Years)
Roger Clemens7 (1986, 1987, 1991, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2004)
Randy Johnson5 (1995, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002)
Steve Carlton4 (1972, 1977, 1980, 1982
Greg Maddux4 (1992, 1993, 1994, 1995)
Seven different pitchers3
12 different pitchers2


Popular MLB futures markets


This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Status Report: NCAA Tournament, Double Bye & A Big Question

Status Report:

  • KenPom: #25
  • Torvik: #23
  • WAB (Torvik): +1.9 ranked #36
  • NET: #26 (Q1: 4-5, Q2: 8-2, Q3: 3-0, Q4: 4-1)
RNKTeamACCOverallGame 1Game 2Game 3Game 4Game 5
1Duke13-124-2MICH – NND – AUVA – HNCS – AUNC – H
2UVA11-223-3MIA – HNCS – HDUKE – AWF – HVT – H
3Miami10-321-5UVA – AFSU – ABC – HSMU – ALOU – H
4Clemson10-420-7FSU – HLOU – HUNC – AGT – H
5NC State10-419-8UVA – AND – ADuke – HSTAN – H
6UNC8-520-6SYR – ALOU – HVT – HCLEM – HDUKE – A
7Louisville8-519-7GT – HUNC – ACLEM – ASYR – HMIA – A
8SMU7-618-8BC – HCAL – ASTAN – AMIA – HFSU – A

THE BIG QUESTION: Will Matt Able break into the starting lineup? I think it is time to start him.

Assuming Matt would start at shooting guard in front of Tre Holloman, comparing the two.

  • Pro – Matt Able is 4” taller. Both attack the basket, both shoot well from outside. Defensively, Able has nearly caught up with Holloman, but Tre has a huge experience advantage. Matt has 31 steals (2nd on the team) to Tre’s 22. Matt has 94 rebounds (5th on the team) to Tre’s 45. Matt has recently become the greater offensive threat. On the season Tre has 243 points to Matt’s 241.
  • Con – Tre Holloman is a senior with tremendous experience in high level games. He is a smart, aggressive defender and can hit from outside, 39.8% to Matt’s 37.7%. On the season, Tre has hit 41 3PT to Matt’s 40. Tre has 55 assists to Matt’s 25. Tre is the better defender and the better passer.
  • What does the Wolfpack need? Rebounding should be the deciding factor. The guards need to rebound. Able is the better rebounder, and better at attacking the basket – his height helps.
  • Major Other Consideration: We want both Able and McNeil back next season. If they can’t play together, why would both come back? We want them to play together and like playing together. Let’s start that as soon as possible.

A look around the neighborhood

SchoolNETSchoolNETSchoolNET
BC156LOU14SMU31
CAL60MIA37STAN71
CLEM33NCST26SYR72
DU2UNC28UVA16
FSU84ND86VT55
GT169PITT126WF58
SchoolNETSchoolNETSchoolNET
AUB34OLEM92UAB114
BSU65SHU51UNC A226
KAN13TEX36UNC G296
LIB77TSU318VCU45
NCC345

Presumptive Top NBA Pick Darryn Peterson Subs Out of Another Game as Kansas Coach Calls Ongoing Issues ‘Concerning’

Darryn Peterson, Bill Self Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images
Darryn Peterson, Bill Self

Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

NEED TO KNOW

  • University of Kansas star freshman Darryn Peterson has missed 11 games so far this season for a variety of maladies
  • On Wednesday, Feb. 18 in Stillwater, Okla., Peterson scored 23 points in 19 minutes before asking his coach to take him out of the game against Oklahoma State
  • Kansas coach Bill Self said the ongoing issue is "concerning"

The curious case of Darryn Peterson continues at the University of Kansas, and now his head coach says it’s “becoming a concern.”

Peterson, a presumptive top pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, is known for his effortless abilities on the court. But after he subbed out of the Wednesday, Feb. 18, game against Oklahoma State early in the second half and didn’t return — even after scoring 23 points in 19 minutes — coach Bill Self is seemingly calling out his effort.

"It's a concern," Self, 63, told reporters after the game, via ESPN. "I thought we were past it, but obviously we're not. It's certainly a concern.”

The legendary coach continued, "You get into the NCAA tournament, you're playing a team just as good as you, and you need to have all your best players available, so to speak. All it takes is for one day like that to derail not only a game, but a season. It's concerning, but I do think we're making progress with it."

Peterson, 19, has missed 11 games so far this season, according to Yahoo Sports, and has cited a variety of reasons — hamstring and ankle issues, “flu-like symptoms” and ongoing cramping. But critics are becoming increasingly vocal about his possible NBA-style “load management,” in which he is electing to rest and, some theorize, protect his draft stock.

In a video from his final moments on the floor Wednesday, Peterson sinks a 3 and then motions for Self to take him out of the game.

The behavior was seemingly perplexing to one of college basketball’s all-time winningest coaches.

Darryn Peterson played 18 minutes on Wednesday night against Oklahoma State in Stillwater, Okla. William Purnell-Imagn Images
Darryn Peterson played 18 minutes on Wednesday night against Oklahoma State in Stillwater, Okla.

William Purnell-Imagn Images

"Well, we've had it more than a couple times," Self told reporters about Peterson’s problems. "And I didn't anticipate that tonight at all. I thought that he was good to go. But, obviously, we only got 18 [19] minutes out of him. And that's really disappointing, because he could have had a really big night.”

Now, basketball experts, not to mention Jayhawk fans, are calling for clarity as March Madness looms.

“There is no team in hell that should grab Darryn Peterson No. 1. You cannot do it. The first ability is availability,” Stephen A. Smith said on Thursday, Feb. 19’s First Take. “My brother, Darryn Peterson, I hope you are watching, because I’m talking directly to him, whoever, his family members, his inner circle, whatever, whoever they are — what the hell is going on?”

Darryn Peterson Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty
Darryn Peterson

Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty

“Not gone lie that Darryn Peterson situation at Kansas is weird, bro is not a team player at all,” one fan wrote on X. “That team can be & do so much stuff if he just played full games it’s crazy bc all the other top recruits are hooping regardless of draft projections.”

Others are questioning, in the age of NIL, if Peterson even wants to be playing for the No. 8 team in the country.

"If I were a [NBA] general manager, I would be extremely concerned about Darryn Peterson,” Jay Williams said on Get Up. “His talent is unquestionable. It's elite. But I don't feel like he really wants to be there."

Read the original article on People

Who is Zhongyan Ning? Meet Chinese speed skater who denied Jordan Stolz 1500m gold with Olympic record time

Zhongyan Ning

Who is Zhongyan Ning? Meet Chinese speed skater who denied Jordan Stolz 1500m gold with Olympic record time originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

As Jordan Stolz went for a third gold medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics in the 1500-meter race, Zhongyan Ning had other ideas.

Ning went ahead of Stolz and produced an exceptional time of 1:41.98 in the race, which was too much for Stolz to overcome. While Stolz ended up with the silver medal, the American was .77 seconds behind Ning's gold-medal time.

Most fans were not expecting to see Ning at the top of the podium, but the Chinese speed-skater is no slouch. Ning was one of Stolz's biggest threats in the 1500-meter, and that concern came to fruition as he had the best race of his life.

Here's what you need to know about the newest Chinese gold medalist.

MORE 2026 OLYMPICS: Live medal tracker | Viewer's guide | Day-by-day schedule

Who is Zhongyan Ning?

Zhongyan Ning is a 26-year-old speed skater who set a new Olympic record by winning the gold in the 1500-meter race. His win in the 1500-meter marks the first time that a Chinese speed skater won the event in the Olympics.

Ning Zhongyan wins the gold in the 1500m speed skating event with an Olympic record time of 1:41.98 🏅

He is the first Chinese men's skater to win gold in this event, and it is just the third gold medal for China in speed skating 👏 pic.twitter.com/tzJqEghMgc

— ESPN Insights (@ESPNInsights) February 19, 2026

Ning previously won gold medals in both the 1000-meter and 1500-meter races at the 2025 Asian Games last February. He was also China's flag bearer for the 2026 Winter Olympics opening ceremony. 

MORE: Where is American speed skater Jordan Stolz from?

Where is Zhongyan Ning from?

Zhongyan Ning is from Heilongjiang, China, and he is one of the country's best athletes in Winter Olympics history.

MORE: Exactly how fast are speed skaters moving?

Zhongyan Ning Olympic medals

Zhongyan Ning has won three medals in the 2026 Winter Olympics, two bronze and now a gold medal.

Ning earned bronze medals in both the men's team pursuit and men's 1000-meter events, but took him his first gold medal with an Olympic record time in the 1500-meter race.

MORE: Jordan Stolz sets 500M olympic record

Fastest 1500m speed skating times

Zhongyan Ning set an Olympic record on Thursday with a time of 1:41.98 in the 1500-meter event. In fact, three other skaters also beat the previous record, as Jordan Stolz, Kjeld Nuis and Joep Wennemars all beat the previous record of 1:43.21.

However, Nuis' world record of 1:40.17 still stands after the race. Nuis set the record in the 2019 ISU World Cup Speed Skating Final, which came in between his two gold medals in the 2018 and 2022 Winter Olympics.

Olympic 1500m speed skating results

RankNameCountryTime
1.Zhongyan NingChina1:41.98
2.Jordan StolzUSA1:42.75
3.Kleld NuisNetherlands1:42.82
4.Joep WennemarsNetherlands1:43.05
5.Daniele di StefanoItaly1:43.41
6.Pedar KongshaugNorway1:43.93
7.Min-Seok KimHungary1:45.13
8.Gabriel OdorAustria1:45.18
9.Sander EitremNorway1:45.36
10.Vladimir SemirunnyPoland1:45.37

Impact of ‘dead money’ on Ravens’ 2026 salary cap: Understanding the significance

Eagles' GM Howie Roseman has built a juggernaut, paying his star players while circumventing the salary cap and keeping cap hits below the league average. Last spring, Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow made comments about the "Eagles paying their players."

"You could convert some of the money to a signing bonus, which will lower the cap hit," Burrow said. "You can push some of the money to the back end of the contract. That lowers the cap hit. And then when you get to the back end of the contract, you can restructure it and convert it to a signing bonus. You can also just take less money."

“I know everybody has their different battles with the cap that hit at different times. Philly will have theirs coming up where they’ll have to make tough decisions.”

Burrow's comments follow those of Dallas Cowboys co-owner Stephen Jones, who discussed the Eagles' roster-building methods and pushing money back through void years.

The March 9 legal tampering period is fast approaching, and the Ravens have $22,043,387 in available cap space right now, but could have a ton more if not for a $12,262,715 dead salary cap hit that places Baltimore at 16th in the NFL, per Over The Cap, and could grow even bigger.

What is dead money?

Dead money, which is also known as "dead cap space" or simply "dead cap."

Dead money is a salary cap charge for a player no longer on a team's roster. Typically, it stems from guaranteed money already given to a player in the form of signing bonuses who is either released, traded, or retires. If the team and player part ways before the end of the contract, whether via a release, trade, or retirement, the remaining prorated bonus is accelerated to the team's current salary cap. That creates the dead money charge, which ensures the team's total contract value paid matches the overall cap charges the player accrued while with the organization.

Ravens' dead money situation?

Marcus Williams$6,027,918
Justin Tucker$4,645,000
Michael Pierce$1,334,000

Ravens next move

DeCosta is a wizard, and salary cap hell will likely never happen as it continues to rise by $30 million each season, regardless of the dead cap hits accrued by pushing time back with void years.

This article originally appeared on Ravens Wire: Ravens' salary cap: Breaking down Baltimore's $12.2M in dead money

Olympic Hockey Odds For Milano Cortina 2026: Canada Favored Over USA With Semifinals Set

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After a wild quarterfinal round, the Olympic men's hockey tournament has found its final four.

Canada is still favored to win it all, and will play Finland for the right to advance to the gold medal game. The United States remains the second choice, and plays Slovakia in the semifinals on Friday.

Let's dive into the available men's Olympic hockey odds as action continues, with the gold medal game scheduled for Sunday, February 22.

Men's Olympic hockey gold medal odds

TeamDraftKingsBet99
Canada Canada-120-140
USA USA+115+130
Finland Finland+1500+1300
Slovakia Slovakia+3500+4000

Odds as of 2-19.

Pre-tournament Olympic men's hockey gold medal pick: Canada (+120)

One team having Macklin Celebrini, Sidney Crosby, Nathan MacKinnon, Mitch Marner, Connor McDavid, and Sam Reinhart on offense is just unfair. Then give it two of the NHL's best blueliners in Cale Makar and Josh Morrissey, and add red-hot netminder Logan Thompson, and you've got a recipe for a gold medal win.


Men's Hockey Final Challenege
Men's Hockey Final Challenge

Men's Olympic hockey name the finalist odds

TeamDraftKingsBet99
Canada vs. USA+115+115
Canada vs. Sweden+300+300
USA vs. Sweden+400+400
Canada vs. Finland+550+600
USA vs. Finland+700+700
Finland vs. Sweden+1100+1000

Odds as of 2-16.

Pre-tournament name the finalists pick: Canada vs. USA (+150)

When it comes down to crunch time, the most important position on the ice is goaltender. The Canadians have arguably the hottest goalie going into the tournament in Thompson, while the Americans have reigning Vezina winner Connor Hellebuyck.

They'll grind out the elimination games to set up the heavyweight clash in the gold medal game.

Men's Olympic hockey top goalscorer odds

TeamDraftKings
Macklin Celebrini+275
Tim Stutzle +425
Auston Matthews+500
Juraj Slafkovsky +800
Timo Meier +950
Nathan MacKinnon+1300
Martin Necas +1700
Connor McDavid +1800
Brady Tkachuk +2200
Sidney Crosby+2500

Odds as of 2-16.

Pre-tournament top goalscorer pick: Kyle Connor (+10000)

Team Canada has too many mouths to feed, and Team USA's Auston Matthews feels too short at +900.

Kyle Connor caught my eye far down the board for the Americans, as he's scored 30+ goals every year since 2017-18 (excluding the COVID-shortened 2020-21 campaign), and has hit 40+ goals twice. He's on pace for 35 goals this year.


Men's Olympic hockey group winner odds

Group A

TeamDraftKingsBet99
Canada Canada-475-475
Czechia Czechia+600+450
Switzerland Switzerland+700+800
France France+50000+50000

Group A winner pick: Canada (-400) - Canada won Group A by going undefeated in round-robin play.

While Czechia and Switzerland each boast some notable NHL names, Team Canada has several bonafide superstars, as well as five of the Top 6 names in the top goalscorer market. The Canadians will coast to a Group A win.

Group B

TeamDraftKingsBet99
Sweden Sweden-155-175
Finland Finland+140+140
Slovakia Slovakia+1600+1600
Italy Italy+50000+50000

Group B winner pick: Sweden (-155) - Slovakia won Group B by earning the tiebreaker over Finland and Sweden.

Finland is the defending Olympic champion, but NHL players didn't go to the Beijing 2022 games. Suomi didn't look so hot in last year's 4 Nations Face-Off, finishing with a -6 goal differential.

Sweden, meanwhile, went 1-0-2, putting a scare into Canada while beating Team USA. They'll avenge their OT loss to the Finns.

Group C

TeamDraftKingsBet99
USA USA-1100-1000
Germany Germany+800+700
Latvia Latvia+3500+2900
Denmark Denmark+5000+4000

Group C winner pick: USA (-1000) - USA went 3-0 in the round robin to win Group C.

Team USA not winning Group C would be an upset of massive proportions. Germany may have notable names like Leon Draisaitl and Tim Stutzle, but the Americans will have NHLers jumping the boards on every shift.

Picks made on 2-4-26.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

PREVIEW | Toulouse vs Paris FC - team news, lineups, predictions

PREVIEW | Toulouse vs Paris FC - team news, lineups, predictions
PREVIEW | Toulouse vs Paris FC - team news, lineups, predictions

Toulouse and Paris FC face off this Saturday at the Stadium de Toulouse in Ligue 1.

Toulouse have picked up 30 points and currently lie in 10th position. In their last encounter, Carles Martínez's team were beaten 2-1 by Le Havre (Ligue 1 2025/26).

Paris FC have 22 points to their name this season and occupy 15th position in the table. In their last game, Stéphane Gilli's team lost 0-5 against Lens (Ligue 1 2025/26).

The last meeting between the two teams ended with Toulouse winning 3-0.

Unavailable

Toulouse

  • Mark McKenzie - Yellow Card Suspension
  • Frank Magri - Knee Injury

Paris FC

  • Pierre-Yves Hamel - Calf Injury
  • Maxime López - Yellow Card Suspension
  • Samir Chergui - Hamstring Injury
  • Adama Camara - Yellow Card Suspension
  • Hamari Traoré - Knee Injury

Last starting XIs

Toulouse ( vs Le Havre 2026-02-15): Guillaume Restes, Mark McKenzie, Charlie Cresswell, Rasmus Nicolaisen, Rafik Messali, Pape Demba Diop, Cristian Cásseres Jr, Djibril Sidibé, Aron Donnum, Emersonn, Yann Gboho

Paris FC ( vs Lens 2026-02-14): Kevin Trapp, Diego Coppola, Timothée Kolodziejczak, Otávio Ataíde, Rudy Matondo, Marshall Munetsi, Maxime López, Nhoa Sangui, Ilan Kebbal, Ciro Immobile, Luca Koleosho

Did you know...by playmaker stats

MANAGERS

  • Carles Martínez faced Stéphane Gilli on one occasion, recording a win.
  • Stéphane Gilli faced Toulouse on one occasion, recording a defeat.
  • Carles Martínez faced Paris FC on one occasion, recording a win.

TEAMS

  • Away from home, Paris FC has gone two consecutive games without winning.
  • Paris FC currently has one win in the last six games.
  • Paris FC is on a five-game winless streak.
  • At home, Toulouse currently has two defeats in the last ten games.
  • At home, Toulouse has gone three consecutive games without losing.
  • Toulouse has gone two consecutive games without a win.
  • Toulouse is coming off two consecutive defeats.

HEAD TO HEAD

  • Toulouse and Paris FC have faced each other nine times, with Toulouse having the advantage: four wins, against three victories for Paris FC.
  • At the Stadium de Toulouse, there is no advantage between Toulouse and Paris FC: two wins each in five games.
  • In the French League, a match was played between the two teams, with a victory for Toulouse.

Why Fabregas cannot be punished with video evidence after Milan 1-1 Como

Why Fabregas cannot be punished with video evidence after Milan 1-1 Como
Why Fabregas cannot be punished with video evidence after Milan 1-1 Como

Many were calling for video evidence to be used in punishing Como coach Cesc Fabregas for self-confessed ‘unsporting behaviour’ against Milan, but the rules wouldn’t allow it.

The incident caused controversy during last night’s rescheduled Serie A Week 24 match at San Siro, which ended 1-1.

Fabregas confessed to unsporting behaviour

ROME, ITALY – DECEMBER 15: Cesc Fabregas, Head Coach of Como 1907, applauds the fans at the end of the Serie A match between AS Roma and Como 1907 at Stadio Olimpico on December 15, 2025 in Rome, Italy. (Photo by Paolo Bruno/Getty Images)

At the 80th minute, Alexis Saelemaekers was battling with two Como players for the ball on the touchline when he felt either a tug on his shirt or a push in the back.

It was Fabregas, but it made him turn around and react angrily, allowing Como to create a dangerous attacking situation.

MILAN, ITALY – JANUARY 18: Alexis Saelemaekers of AC Milan reacts during the Serie A match between AC Milan and US Lecce at Giuseppe Meazza Stadium on January 18, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

The Saelemaekers response sparked a touchline row that saw Milan coach Max Allegri and Como team manager Davide Cattaneo sent off.

As there was no punishment for Fabregas, who confessed in his press conference and several post-match interviews to “unsporting behaviour” with Saelemaekers, many were calling for action to be taken using video evidence.

COMO, ITALY – FEBRUARY 14: Como 1907 coach Cesc Fabregas issues instructions to his player Anastasios Douvikas of Como 1907 during the Serie A match between Como 1907 and ACF Fiorentina at Giuseppe Sinigaglia Stadium on February 14, 2026 in Como, Italy. (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

However, an analysis of the Lega Serie A rules show why that is not going to happen.

Article 61 of the sporting justice system clearly states that video evidence can only be used in situations where there is violent conduct, serious unsporting behaviour, or blasphemous phrases.

Serious unsporting behaviour is also clarified in the code of conduct as evident simulation to win a penalty or get a player sent off, scoring voluntarily with a hand, or denying a goal with intentional handball.

Violent conduct also cannot really be applied to this situation, because Saelemaekers was at most tapped on the back.

Fabregas therefore will not be punished, but it was an extremely unusual situation where a coach interfered with play while staying off the field.

Cleveland Browns promote CB coach to a higher position

CLEVELAND, OHIO - SEPTEMBER 24: Cornerbacks coach Brandon Lynch of the Cleveland Browns directs a drill prior to a game against the Tennessee Titans at Cleveland Browns Stadium on September 24, 2023 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Getty Images

Cleveland Browns head coach Todd Monken went “outside the family” to hire Mike Rutenberg as the team’s defensive coordinator.

While Monken’s offensive coaching staff has seen almost a complete turnover, save for wide receivers coach Christian Jones and running backs coach Duce Staley, the situation has been somewhat quiet on the defensive side of the ball as the team focused on the defensive coordinator position.

That is starting to change now that Rutenberg is on board, and on Thursday, the news broke that the Browns are promoting Brandon Lynch from cornerbacks coach to defensive backs coach/defensive pass game specialist.

That is according to Jonathan Jones at CBS Sports.

The Browns have promoted Brandon Lynch to DBs coach/pass game specialist, sources tell @NFLonCBS. Lynch, considered a future DC candidate, was pursued by multiple teams this offseason. The respected coach stays in Cleveland with the new coaching regime. pic.twitter.com/P7IkcDvEDN

— Jonathan Jones (@jjones9) February 19, 2026

Lynch joined the Browns in 2020 as an assistant defensive backs coach. He started his coaching career in 2010 as an NFLPA coaching intern with Wilmington College. Lynch received his first taste of coaching at the professional level in 2013 when he earned a Bill Walsh NFL Diversity Coaching Fellowship with the Minnesota Vikings. 

He played in the NFL for three seasons, first as a safety with the Tennessee Titans (2004), and then as a cornerback and safety for the Indianapolis Colts for two seasons (2005 to 2006). Lynch finished his professional career in the Canadian Football League, playing two seasons with the Saskatchewan Roughriders (2007 to 2009).

Lynch was recently a guest on the Coaching Crossover podcast, where he talked about how he communicates with players and fellow coaches, his transition from playing to coaching, and the coaches who have paved the way for him.

Lynch has drawn interest from other teams, previously interviewing with the Titans for their vacant defensive coordinator position in 2024. 

During his time in Cleveland, Lynch has worked with a cornerback group led by Denzel Ward, and Lynch was part of the coaching staff that helped Tyson Campbell make a solid transition after he was acquired from the Jacksonville Jaguars midway through the 2025 season.

Nancy Kerrigan Revealed She Never Got an Apology From Tonya Harding for 1994 Olympics Attack

Mega; Universal Archive/Universal Images Group/Newscom/The Mega Agency

It’s been more than three decades since Nancy Kerrigan was famously attacked ahead of the 1994 Winter Olympics — but several years ago, the figure skater revealed she had still not received an apology from Tonya Harding.

“Does it matter, at this point?” Kerrigan, now 56, told ABC in 2017, according to People, revealing that she never received a “direct” apology from Harding, now 55.

In January 1994, during the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Detroit, Kerrigan was attacked with a police baton by a man who was later identified as Shane Stant. Stant was hired by rival Harding’s ex-husband Jeff Gillooly, and her bodyguard, Shawn Eckardt, to attack Kerrigan in an effort to prevent her from competing at the 1994 Winter Olympics in Norway.

JLJ/ZOJ/Johnny Louis/WENN/Newscom/The Mega Agency

Despite her injury, Kerrigan went on to compete and took home a silver medal at the Olympic Games.

Harding was convicted of conspiracy to hinder prosecution, a felony. As part of a plea deal, Harding admitted to knowing of the assault plot after the fact, concocting a cover story with Gillooly and Eckardt, and lying to the FBI.

She received three years probation, 500 hours of community service and a $160,000 fine.

Harding was also stripped of her 1994 U.S. Championship title, and banned from participating in U.S. Figure Skating Association events as a skater or coach for life.

This story Nancy Kerrigan Revealed She Never Got an Apology From Tonya Harding for 1994 Olympics Attack first appeared on Globe. Add Globe as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Friends reunited as Tandy prepares to face Scotland

Steve Tandy and Gregor Townsend were part of Warren Gatland's British and Irish Lions coaching team in South Africa in 2021
Steve Tandy and Gregor Townsend were part of Warren Gatland's British and Irish Lions coaching team in South Africa in 2021 [Getty Images]

Wales head coach Steve Tandy is looking forward to reunite with his old Scotland friends at the Principality Stadium on Saturday.

Tandy spent almost six years as the Scottish defence coach before taking over the Wales job in September 2025.

"Every game is emotional, and I've got a lot of friends and players who I've gone through a lot with after six years of coaching them," said Tandy.

"I'm grateful for that time in Scotland – the people, the fans, everything was outstanding.

"It will be a huge game for me, but no different to any other game we want to win.

"We want to put a performance in and it will be a special day because there are a lot of amazing memories from Scotland.

"We are ready to create memories in Wales now. It's my home nation so it has the potential to be even better."

Familiarity will not breed contempt

Scotland head coach Gregor Townsend will be preparing his team to face a struggling Wales side but Tandy accepts there will be a familiarity on both sides.

"They know a lot about me and I know a lot about the coaching staff," said Tandy.

"They were amazing and we went through a lot with World Cups and amazing moments in the Six Nations.

"They know how I go about things too but it's probably a case of not overthinking it and delving into too much detail, because you can outthink yourself."

Instead of working for Townsend, this time Tandy will be in direct opposition to his former boss.

"It'll be great to see him after the game," said Townsend.

"We've been sharing messages, not many this week, but in the first couple of games.

"We think very fondly of Steve. He spent a long time with us, so he's been a big influence on our players.

"He was a massive help to me as a coach, and I'm sure after the game, whatever the result, we can have a few beers in the changing room."

Tandy added: "It'll definitely be different!"

"He was brilliant for me, taught me lots about international rugby, encouraged me to be better and helped my growth and development.

"He pushed me to be out of my comfort zone and I feel your best growth comes when you get uncomfortable."

It has been uncomfortable so far for Tandy in his new role.

In his six games in charge, Wales have lost five and conceded 302 points and 42 tries.

So what are his expectations for his home country against the nation that gave him his international break?

"The expectation is to be better than we were last week," said Tandy.

"We understand how good Scotland are as well, they beat England comfortably and should have beaten the All Blacks.

"It's there in black and white, we've only won two games in 25 so it's not going to come with a click of a finger.

"We believe in this group and if we are better than we were last week, I think will get closer to where we want to be."

Can Scotland back up their England victory?

Scotland bounced back from defeat in Italy to sweep aside England 31-20 in last weekend's Calcutta Cup clash at Murrayfield.

It was a fifth win in six games for the Scots against the English but they have had problems backing that up in recent years.

"Seeing them become the team they are is pleasing, and seeing them beating England was good," said Tandy.

"Any international sport when you win, there's an emotional high after what goes into the game.

"Scotland are a pretty experienced team. They've gone through those moments and I feel they've backed up games as well.

"The England game has always been huge for them. They have lost games where they had beaten England before, but they're aware of it and talking about it.

"I don't think that's a major issue for them."

Will Wales break their Six Nations home losing streak?

Wales have lost 23 out of their previous 25 Tests with 13 successive losses in the Six Nations.

They have not won a Six Nations home game since beating Scotland in February 2022, when Tandy was the visiting defence coach.

Since that day, Wales have suffered 10 successive defeats in the tournament at the Principality Stadium.

The closest they have come to a Six Nations win in Cardiff was two years ago against Scotland when the hosts came back from 27-0 before agonisingly losing 27-26.

Tandy was again in the Scottish coaching box that day and has vivid memories of the game in February 2024 as Scotland achieved a first win in Cardiff for 22 years.

"That game, when we were at 27-0. I remember being in that Scotland dressing room, and then once something clicked into gear, then everything changed," said Tandy.

"The crowd changed - everything changed.

"Scotland, at the time, had two or three yellow cards in that game, which shifted the momentum of the game completely."

Tandy will be hoping this weekend it will be his new side that are victorious.

What time does Amber Glenn actually skate today? Full schedule for women's figure skating final at Olympics

What time does Amber Glenn actually skate today? Full schedule for women's figure skating final at Olympics originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Amber Glenn nearly nailed her short program to begin the individual women's figure skating competition at the 2026 Winter Olympics.

But one bad pass was all it took for the Team USA star to have her score greatly impacted.

Now, Glenn has some work to do.

The free skate is on Thursday, and Glenn is sitting in 13th place with a 67.39 from the opening round.

That score will combine with her free skate to give a total score toward medal contention.

Glenn is an underdog, but she's not out of it entirely.

LIVE: Tracking Amber Glenn's performance from Olympic finals

What time does Amber Glenn actually skate today?

Glenn will skate at 2:50 p.m. ET (which is 8:50 p.m. local time in Italy).

She is the 12th competitor to perform out of 24, as they go in reverse order of short program score.

Glenn is the last skater in warmup group two.

Her teammate Isabeau Levito goes nearly an hour later at 3:52 p.m. ET.

Alysa Liu goes at 4:40 p.m. ET.

MORE: A dog stole the show at the finish line of cross country skiing

The final two competitors will be Japan's Kaori Sakamoto (4:48 p.m. ET) and Ami Nakai (4:57 p.m. ET), who had the two-best short program scores.

Liu enters in bronze medal position.

Glenn is 11.32 points behind Nakai, a gap that isn't insurmountable.

More Olympics news:

Quins bring in prop duo Jones and Heaney

Doncaster's Joe Jones crouches and grabs another player in a tackle
Jones (right) had been playing Championship rugby for Doncaster this season [Getty Images]

Harlequins have signed Joe Jones and Alessandro Heaney on short-term deals to bolster their options at prop.

Experienced tight-head prop Jones joins Quins from Championship side Doncaster Knights until the end of the season.

The 30-year-old previously played in the Prem for Sale Sharks and has had spells with Cardiff Blues, Perpignan and Scarlets.

Heaney, 23, started out in Major League Rugby before joining Cornish Pirates and will head back to the United States next month.

Quins are without forwards Ethan Clarke and Jamie Miller, who both picked up injuries against Northampton Saints last weekend, while tight-head prop Luke Yendle has left The Stoop after Dragons ended his loan spell.

Jordan Stolz's Olympics now a 'partial success' after silver in 1500

MILAN — On the night he won his second gold medal at these Olympics, speedskating phenom Jordan Stolz pondered an intriguing question.

Would he consider his Olympics a success if he accomplished nothing more? Could he return home to Wisconsin satisfied with having proven that he’s the fastest skater on the planet over 500 and 1,000 meters?

Stolz’s answer offered a window into the mindset of an athlete in peak form, one with ambitions of achieving something truly historic in Milan. These Olympics would only be a “partial success,” according to Stolz, if he didn’t also check taking gold in the 1,500 off his to-do list.

“I’ve been so good in that distance for so long,” Stolz said, “so I hope I can win that one too.” 

Five days later, in front of a roaring crowd, Stolz fell short in his bid to become the first athlete in 46 years to complete speedskating’s sprint treble at an Olympics. Stolz finished second in the 1,500 in a time of 1:42.75 on Thursday, leaving him with two gold medals and a silver with one race still left to contest before he leaves Milan. 

Since Stolz had the luxury of skating in the final pair of the competition, the 21-year-old knew the exact time that he needed to beat as he stood at the starting line. Two pairs earlier, Zhongyan Ning of China had completed the three-and-three-quarters-lap race in an Olympic record time of 1:41.98 and was hoping that his time might hold up. 

Carlo Ancelotti Shares Reflections on Vinicius Jr., Coaching Challenges and Real Madrid Return in Jorge Valdano Interview Trailer

LONDON, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 15: Vinicius Junior of Brazil embraced by Carlo Ancelotti, Manager / Head Coach of Brazil during the International Friendly between Brazil and Senegal at Emirates Stadium on November 15, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Marc Atkins/Getty Images) | Getty Images

A trailer released ahead of Carlo Ancelotti’s upcoming interview with Jorge Valdano has offered an early glimpse into the Italian coach’s thoughts on Vinicius Jr., the challenges of management, and the possibility of returning to Real Madrid.

While the full conversation has yet to be made public, several quotes from Ancelotti were revealed in the preview.

Speaking about Vinicius Jr., Ancelotti highlighted the Brazilian forward’s development in recent seasons.

“I’ve spoken with Vinicius. A player has to respect the coach and his teammates. He’s improved his attitude on the field a lot,”

Ancelotti also commented on Vinicius’ character away from club competition, drawing a distinction between his demeanor with the Brazilian national team and at Real Madrid.

“Brazilians are very humble, they’re very different. The Vini who comes here is very different from the one at Real Madrid, on a human level,”

The veteran coach addressed the broader challenges that come with managing players and building a cohesive environment, emphasizing the importance of adaptability.

“He has encountered difficulties… The spirit of adaptation is a very important component in a coach’s job, and trying to recreate an atmosphere takes time, which isn’t always possible,”

In the trailer’s closing moments, Ancelotti was asked about the prospect of returning to Real Madrid. His response was brief but suggestive.

“Would I like to return to Real Madrid? That’s a good question…”

The full interview with Jorge Valdano is expected to be released in the coming days.

Confirmed UEFA Women’s Champions League Lineups: Juventus vs. Wolfsburg

Confirmed UEFA Women’s Champions League Lineups: Juventus vs. Wolfsburg
Confirmed UEFA Women’s Champions League Lineups: Juventus vs. Wolfsburg

Juventus host Wolfsburg in the return leg of the UEFA Women’s Champions League playoff tie. The two teams drew 2-2 in Wolfsburg last week as tonight’s winner will face OL Lyonnes in the quarter-finals.

Alexandra Popp is missing from the traveling squad due to an infection. Here are the lineups of the two teams for the game in Turin.

Confirmed Lineups

Juventus Femminile: de Jong; Lenzini, Salvai, Harviken; Carbonell, Wälti, Schatzer, Bonansea ©; Godo; Beccari, Capeta

Wolfsburg Frauen: Johannes; Linder, Küver, Dijkstra, Bjelde; Kielland, Minge ©, Peddemors; Huth, Beerensteyn, Endeman

2026 Women's AFCON – Group B: Ivory Coast overview, squad and schedule

2026 Women's AFCON – Group B: Ivory Coast overview, squad and schedule
2026 Women's AFCON – Group B: Ivory Coast overview, squad and schedule

Overview, squad and schedule for Ivory Coast at the 2026 Women's AFCON

Côte d’Ivoire/@Koaci

Morocco will become the epicenter of African women's football as it hosts the latest edition of the Women's AFCON, scheduled from March 17 to April 3, 2026.

Alongside the reigning champions Nigeria, several squads are well-equipped to chase ultimate glory.

Ivory Coast overview

The Elephants will make their third appearance in the final tournament of the Women's Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON 2026), following participations in 2010 and 2014.

Their best performance to date remains a third-place finish at the 2014 edition held in Namibia.

Ivory Coast squad

Reynald Pedros, head coach of the Elephants, placed his trust in the following players last October against Senegal:

Goalkeepers: Gnamien Ablan (Atlético), Diakité Aramatou (AGIR), Koffi Agnès (Juventus FC)

Defenders: Diakité Mariam (Fenerbahçe), Gbehi Anastasie (ASEC), Cissé Matoba (Tausi FC), Kpaho Nina (Sanayispor), Fofana Aicha (ASEC)

Midfielders: Brou Sopie (ASEC), Amani Kakounan (Tenerife), Doudou Yetti (ASEC), Gnounoue Erica (ASEC), Yapo Aboa Katchi (ASEC), Dagba Essi (ASEC), Ello Rebecca (Valencia)

Forwards: Ouédraogo Habibou (ASEC), Konan Inès (Strasbourg), Kokora Sylviane (SC Casablanca), Dialla Ami (ASEC), Kreto Priscille (BILK Shymkent), Kouassi Rosemonde (Washington Spirit), Behinan Melissa (Amedspor), Koffi Jocelyne (Suffield Academy)

Ivory Coast schedule

March 17, 2026: Ivory Coast vs Burkina Faso, Al Medina Stadium, Rabat

March 20, 2026: South Africa vs Ivory Coast, Al Medina Stadium, Rabat

FIFA March 2026 matchday: Morocco set for a fresh start

FIFA March 2026 matchday: Morocco set for a fresh start
FIFA March 2026 matchday: Morocco set for a fresh start

Morocco set for a fresh start

FIFA March 2026 matchday: Morocco set for a fresh start

The Moroccan national team is gearing up to usher in a new era starting with the upcoming international break scheduled for March.

The African vice-champions of Africa will square off on March 27 against Ecuador at Riyadh Air Metropolitano Stadium in Madrid, Spain, before facing Paraguay on the 31st of the same month at the Bollaert-Delelis Stadium in Lens, France.

According to Moroccan media outlet Almountakhab, Morocco's squad list will feature seven new players, notably including the trio Yasser Zabiri, Othmane Maâma, and Ismael Baouf, who played a key role in the Lion Cubs' triumph at the U20 World Cup.

Another new face expected in the Moroccan lineup is Yanis Begraoui, the striker from Portuguese club Estoril Praia, who has racked up 15 goals and 2 assists in 22 Liga Portugal matches.

Meanwhile, Mehdi Benabid, the last line of defense for Wydad Athletic Club, will return to the Atlas Lions' den, replacing Munir Mohand Mohamedi El Kajoui, who is sidelined with a shoulder injury.

Boiler Alert Podcast: #1 Michigan Proves Why They are #1

WEST LAFAYETTE, INDIANA - FEBRUARY 17: L.J. Cason #2 of the Michigan Wolverines and Omer Mayer #17 of the Purdue Boilermakers scramble for the ball during the second half at Mackey Arena on February 17, 2026 in West Lafayette, Indiana. (Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images) | Getty Images

That was a pretty brutal four minute stretch wasn’t it? Purdue went from hanging in there with the #1 team in the country to down by double digits with the game for all intents and purposes over. It was a tough scene to watch as Michigan grabbed offensive rebound after offensive rebound. On two early possessions in the first half Michigan grabbed two offensive rebounds, meaning they get three shot attempts, before ultimately both possessions ended in made three pointers for the Wolverines. Those possessions are backbreaking for a team trying to take down an incredibly talented team. You can’t give them EXTRA opportunities to put points on the board.

I discuss this loss to Michigan and what it means for the team overall and the remainder of not just the conference season but the post-season as well. Do I think Purdue still has a shot to get to the Final Four in Indianapolis? You’ll have to listen to find out.

Dallas Cowboys rumors today: What would it take to get Maxx Crosby?

The official part of the NFL world is mostly in a quiet time until the NFL Combine starts up in Indianapolis on March 23, but the world of wild speculation and “dream scenarios” for 32 teams is in full swing.

As will happen, Dallas is at the center of much of this, as the Cowboys seem to be a buyer in the market for defensive players while having a big offensive asset in receiver George Pickens to wave around, should they want to wave him around.

More: Where do things stand with George Pickens and the Dallas Cowboys?

Nov 30, 2025; Inglewood, California, USA; Las Vegas Raiders defensive end Maxx Crosby (98) reacts during the second half at SoFi Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

What would it take to get Raiders edge rusher Maxx Crosby? The cost would be steep, but it would allow Dallas to pretend that the trade last year involving Micah Parsons never happened. A Pro Bowl safety might be appearing on the market and Dallas is linked to him.

Here’s what’s going on.

Maxx Crosby trade to Dallas?

The Bleacher Report’s Joe Moton has taken mid-February speculative punditry to a logical extreme with an article, “Dream Offseason Trade Scenario for Every NFL Team.” So this is essentially 32 articles on moves each team could make, and the Cowboys pop up three different times.

Two are tied to the same player: Disgruntled Raiders edge rusher Maxx Crosby, who has indicated he wants out of Las Vegas. That might have changed now that the coaching staff who sidelined him in a tank race with two weeks left in the regular season was summarily dismissed and Klint Kubiak was hired.

But what if Crosby doesn’t want to go through a massive rebuild and still wants out? There is both Dallas’ move and the Raiders’ move in Moton’s article.

More: Could the Dallas Cowboys take a Texas A&M Aggie in the first round?

Under the headline, “Dallas Cowboys: Acquiring EDGE Maxx Crosby,” he writes: “The Dallas Cowboys are one of four teams with multiple first-round picks in the upcoming draft. They can include one of their Day 1 selections in a blockbuster trade package for Maxx Crosby.

”Ironically, the Las Vegas Raiders want a return that compares to what the Cowboys received from the Green Bay Packers in the Micah Parsons deal. Dallas can start the conversation with pick No. 12 or 20 and find out how far it can get without giving up its 2027 first-rounder.

“If the Cowboys pull off a seismic trade for Crosby, they could have a dominant defensive line that also features Quinnen Williams and Kenny Clark on the interior. 

”In 2025, Dallas gave up the most points and passing yards. It can address the secondary in the draft. A young group of defensive backs would benefit from playing behind a strong front led by Crosby, a five-time Pro Bowler.”

Then Moton turns around and seems to contradict the “without giving up its 2027 first-rounder” under a subsequent headline, “Las Vegas Raiders: Trading Maxx Crosby in a Micah Parsons-like Deal”.

Citing Fox Sports’ Jay Glazer, he writes: “Glazer believes the Raiders can get more for Crosby than what the Green Bay Packers traded to the Dallas Cowboys for Micah Parsons, two first-rounders, and defensive tackle Kenny Clark. NFL insider Jordan Schultz reported that the Raiders would be open to trading Crosby if they could secure a return comparable to the Cowboys' haul for Parsons.”

Parsons is 26 and slightly more productive by most measures than the 28-year-old Crosby but he is coming off an injury. Using what they got when they traded away Parsons for his replacement seems like running in circles, but a circle would put them back where they started last offseason, which is better than where the defense is now.

George Pickens traded from Dallas?

In the same article, Moton lists the Tennessee Titans’ dream move as trading for receiver George Pickens, after Dallas puts a franchise tag on him. That would be a sign-and-trade deal similar to what Green Bay did when it got Parsons with one year left on his contract.

Moton writes: “The Titans have their Day 2 picks for the upcoming draft and $104.8 million in cap space. They have the resources to strike a deal for Pickens if the Cowboys are open for business.”

So he’s projecting a second- or third-round pick, or both, for Pickens. If Dallas does this, it’s because it wants to save money so that it can shift more finances to defense.

George Pickens franchise tag

Dallas has until March 3 to put a franchise tag on George Pickens, which it is expected to go. However, NFL insider Ryan Broaddus went on Dallas radio station 105.3 The Fan (the station that interviews the Jones family every week) thinks Dallas will sit on most of the time between now and then.

"I'm getting the feeling that this tag thing might not get done anytime soon,” Broaddus said in the radio interview. “And if you ask some people the questions about it, if you say, hey, would you guys consider carrying this tag all the way to the end? No rush, kind of a thing? The answers I get are like, yes.”

He concluded: “But, yeah, I just kind of get in the vibe that, you know, there's going to be no rush here. And they're going to talk to him, see where they're at, and then if they have to use it, they'll use it. But I would think this thing is going to come down to the end, from what I'm gathering right now."

Minkah Fitzpatrick

The Dolphins have been perhaps the busiest team in this part of February, making a bunch of cost-cutting cuts in what looks like a complete rebuild, and now they are reportedly shopping five-time Pro Bowl safety Minkah Fitzpatrick.

Sources: The #Dolphins have had trade talks with teams regarding 5x Pro Bowl S Minkah Fitzpatrick.

Miami released four players earlier this week, including Tyreek Hill, and are in the early stages of resetting the roster under a new regime. pic.twitter.com/bADGD0Ndrj

— Jordan Schultz (@Schultz_Report) February 18, 2026

Put him on a huge list of players who could help the Cowboys defense. NFL insider Jordan Schultz tweeted: "Sources: The #Dolphins have had trade talks with teams regarding 5x Pro Bowl S Minkah Fitzpatrick. Miami released four players earlier this week, including Tyreek Hill, and is in the early stages of resetting the roster under a new regime.”

The 29-year-old is in decline at this point in his career; he didn’t make the Pro Bowl this year for the second time since 2019, but would still be better than anything Dallas has on its roster at the position. And indeed, a speculative article in the Sporting News lists Dallas and Detroit as possible suitors.

Mike Moraitis writes: “The Cowboys already have one hole at safety, and they could have another if the team decides to cut veteran Malik Hooker. Adding an experienced veteran like Fitzpatrick could make sense for Dallas.

”Fitzpatrick's decline and contract makes him a tough sell for the Dolphins, but they could help their cause by picking up a significant amount of money, which would make him the cheap option the Cowboys and Lions need.”

There is also plenty of speculation that the Dolphins, for salary cap reasons, will cut him rather than trade him, which would start a bidding war that probably wouldn’t be too expensive.

Bret Bloomquist can be reached at bbloomquist@elpasotimes.com; @Bretbloomquist on X.

This article originally appeared on El Paso Times: Dallas Cowboys rumors: Cowboys are again linked to Maxx Crosby

Is Cam Skattebo retiring? Giants RB goes viral for fake rumor involving Jaxson Dart, streaming

Cam Skattebo 012726

Is Cam Skattebo retiring? Giants RB goes viral for fake rumor involving Jaxson Dart, streaming originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Cam Skattebo electrified the NFL as a rookie running back for the New York Giants before a season-ending injury.

He certainly looks to be a future star for the Giants, who will pair with rookie QB Jaxson Dart to give their fanbase a lot of reason to hope.

That is, as long as the rumor that's freaking fans out isn't true.

Don't worry. It's not.

Is Cam Skattebo retiring?

No, Skattebo is not retiring.

The rumor began thanks to a fake post going viral on X:

Report: Cam Skattebo says on stream that he’s considering retirement.

“I don’t know man. Just look at what has happened to AB, Tua, and Puka. I can probably make as much money streaming bro…the only tough part is leaving Jaxson.” pic.twitter.com/QKA87ep7LY

— Adam Ferrell (@AdamFerrellNFL) February 19, 2026

Right in that account's bio is the word "parody," so you know it's not real news.

It was a good effort by the parody account. Putting a quote in there makes it seem that much more real.

It's not, though. Skattebo isn't going anywhere.

He's supposed to be healed up in time for the offseason programs, and he'll want to follow up his exhilarating rookie season with better health and continued productivity.

Giants fans are sure hoping he has a long and successful career. Skattebo is nowhere near being done.

MORE: Myles Garrett shares poem he wrote that made Chloe Kim cry

Georgia linebackers Chris Cole and Darren Ikinaagbon arrested on driving-related charges

STARKVILLE, MISSISSIPPI - NOVEMBER 08: Chris Cole #9 of the Georgia Bulldogs looks on during the game against the Mississippi State Bulldogs at Davis Wade Stadium on November 08, 2025 in Starkville, Mississippi. (Photo by Justin Ford/Getty Images)
STARKVILLE, MISSISSIPPI - NOVEMBER 08: Chris Cole #9 of the Georgia Bulldogs looks on during the game against the Mississippi State Bulldogs at Davis Wade Stadium on November 08, 2025 in Starkville, Mississippi. (Photo by Justin Ford/Getty Images)
Justin Ford via Getty Images

Two more Georgia football players have been arrested for driving-related offenses.

Linebackers Chris Cole and Darren Ikinaagbon were booked Wednesday night within a half hour of each other on misdemeanor charges. Cole for speeding and reckless driving, according to On3, and Ikinnagbon for speeding, reckless driving and following too closely.

The school said in a statement that it was aware of the charges and was “actively gathering additional information.”

Their arrests continue a trend that is not seeming to slow down in recent years for Georgia players. Over a dozen players have been arrested for driving offenses in the past three years since the death of offensive lineman Devin Willock.

Willock and team staffer Chandler LeCroy were killed in a car crash on Jan. 15, 2023 following the Bulldogs’ national title parade. Police said that LeCroy was driving an SUV that was racing another SUV driven by current Eagles defensive lineman Jalen Carter.

Carter pled no contest to charges of reckless driving for his role in the incident.

Georgia coach Kirby Smart has said his program has implemented efforts to curb the driving issues that have plagued it. In November, Nyier Daniels was dismissed from the team after he was charged with felonies for a police chase. Daniels and his mother were both arrested after he passed an officer who had pulled over his mother while going more than 100 MPH in a 25 MPH zone. Daniels then allegedly reached 150 MPH with his younger siblings in the car while he was evading police.

Cole was fourth on the team with 59 tackles in 2025 while Ikinaagbon had two tackles. 

Scotto: Boston Celtics to convert two way guard John Tonje to full roster spot

The Boston Celtics will -- at least for now -- complete their roster with the addition of two way guard John Tonje. HoopsHype reporter Michael Scotto relates that the Celtics will convert the two way guard to a full roster spot. This move gets the Celtics to the 14-man minimum for the next 10 days with Boston having also signed guard Dalano Banton to a 10-day deal earlier in the day.

Tonje was dealt to the Celtics in the trade that sent vet forward Chris Boucher to the Utah Jazz ahead of the 2026 NBA trade deadline to help Boston get under the luxury tax for this season and start the clock on removing the franchise from a repeater luxury tax status that significantly raises the cost of the team. Tonje has played for both the Maine Celtics and the Salt Lake City Stars (the Jazz' developmental franchise at the G League level) this season, with the Stars his most recent stop.

In total, he averaged 18.8 points, 4.5 rebounds, 1.5 assists, and just under a steal per game while shooting 43.7% from the floor overall, 34.8% from beyond the arc, and 90.4% from the free throw line.

Oct 16, 2025; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Utah Jazz guard John Tonje (17) drives with the ball against Portland Trail Blazers guard Jrue Holiday (5) during the second half at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Peter Creveling-Imagn Images

Don't expect either Tonje or Banton to remain with the Celtics beyond the end of their respective 10-day deals due to their limited spending power under the luxury tax for the rest of the season.

But there will be more moves to come from Boston's front office closer to the end of the 2025-26 NBA regular season as Boston gets to at least 14 players to finish their current campaign heading into the 2026 NBA Playoffs.

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This article originally appeared on Celtics Wire: Scotto: Celtics to convert two way guard John Tonje to full roster

How Yankees' Aaron Judge will benefit more from ABS than any player in MLB

Aaron Judge

How Yankees' Aaron Judge will benefit more from ABS than any player in MLB originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The New York Yankees have had some legendary players come through their organization in MLB history, and Aaron Judge is currently laying out one of the more impressive careers of these icons in MLB history.

He's a multi-time MVP winner and is one of the best right-handed hitters in MLB history. And for the 2026 MLB season, Judge might be able to get a whole lot better thanks to the ABS challenge system.

As Bryan Hoch of MLB.com outlined, Judge is set to benefit from ABS more than any player in Major League Baseball this season. Yankees fans should be excited to see just how much better Judge is now that balls and strikes will be more accurate to his frame.

Yankees' Aaron Judge set to benefit more than any player from ABS

"Since Judge's first full season in 2017, no hitter has had more called strikes against him on pitches out of the strike zone (Judge and Mookie Betts are tied for the most with 683)," Hoch writes.

Judge and Betts will benefit a lot from ABS, which will give them the ability to challenge a strike call that they believe is actually a ball.

But, between these two, Judge is set to benefit in a clearer and more direct way. As Hoch noted, Judge has, far and away, the most strikes called below the zone in the Majors since his debut.

He's had 368 pitches below the strike zone called a strike, while Josh Bell is second with 233 missed calls.

MoreFormer Yankees, Reds, A's outfielder agrees to $4M deal with Padres

Put another way, Judge now will have a lot of help at the bottom of the strike zone with ABS being implemented this season.

At 6-foot-7, Judge is one of the tallest players in MLB. Having pitches below his knees called a strike is a tough reality he had to deal with. But now, with ABS, those calls can be challenged by Judge and turned into a ball.

While there will be plenty of players who benefit from ABS in 2026, including pitchers, there might not be a player who will see as big an impact as Judge will in 2026.

He is already the best hitter in baseball, and with a proper strike zone, Judge could be in store for a massive season in 2026.

More MLB news:

What Northwestern women’s basketball needs to clinch a Big Ten Tournament berth

EVANSTON, ILLINOIS - FEBRUARY 05: Grace Sullivan #22 of the Northwestern Wildcats shoots during the second half of the game against the University of Southern California Trojans at Welsh-Ryan Arena on February 05, 2026 in Evanston, Illinois. (Photo by Zoe Davis/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Despite what has been a season chock-full full of losses, Northwestern women’s basketball still has hopes of qualifying for the Big Ten tournament and thus making March Madness via the automatic bid. Standing at 2-13 in Big Ten play after its recent blowout loss to Michigan State, NU’s path is not obvious; yet, there is still a faint glimmering light at the end of the tunnel.

The ‘Cats currently stand at 16th in the conference and must jump either Indiana or Purdue to finish amongst the top-15 Big Ten teams and advance to the tournament in Indianapolis, IN, which will take place in early March. Standout senior Grace Sullivan and her Wildcats must win at least two of the remaining three games on their schedule if they wish to give soon-to-be-retired head coach Joe McKeown one last dance. Still on the schedule are Illinois, Maryland and Purdue.

The most likely outcome

Unfortunately, the most likely outcome is that Northwestern falls short of qualifying for the tournament. To win two of its remaining three games and give themselves a chance, the Wildcats must split against top competition in Illinois and Maryland before beating Purdue. Illinois is 18-8 overall, 8-7 in the Big Ten, and is led by Berry Wallace, who scored 29 points in the Fighting Illini’s victory over the ‘Cats earlier this year. Maryland, the 14th-ranked team in the country, is 21-6 overall, 9-6 in the Big Ten, and is coming off recent road wins against Ohio State and Michigan State. ESPN’s Matchup Predictor gives Northwestern a 9.1% chance of beating Illinois and a 1.4% chance of taking down Maryland.

Thus, the heavy favorite right now regarding NU’s season outlook is two more losses, extending its losing streak to ten, and rendering the season finale against Purdue meaningless. Even if it can split against Illinois and Maryland, there is no guarantee that results around the conference will go Northwestern’s way to give it a chance to make the tournament.

Hopping The hoosiers

One path to the Big Ten Tournament for the Wildcats is leapfrogging Indiana in the standings. The Hoosiers are 14-13 overall, but at 3-12 in the Big Ten, they only lie one game above the ‘Cats. A one-game gap seems very doable, but there are two big issues.

Firstly, Indiana owns the head-to-head over Northwestern. The Hoosiers picked up their first BIG win of the season against the Wildcats on Feb. 1st in a game where Indiana led 30-3 after the first quarter. Indiana then won its next two games, against Wisconsin and Purdue, giving it an upper hand on the ‘Cats. This head-to-head victory over Northwestern means that Indiana’s one-game lead is more like two; if the teams finish tied in the standings, Indiana will advance via tiebreaker. If Indiana loses the rest of its games and finishes at 3-15 in the Big Ten, Northwestern still has to win two of its remaining three to finish at 4-14.

The second problem is Indiana’s schedule. Remaining for the Hoosiers are Oregon (18-9 overall, 6-8 in BIG), Rutgers (9-17 overall, 1-14 in BIG), and Penn State (9-17 overall, 2-13 in BIG). That’s just about as easy as it gets. Indiana plays two of the Big Ten’s worst three teams, and it would be surprising if they lost both. Even if Indiana wins only one of its remaining games, Northwestern would have to win all three of its games, something already deemed improbable.

Bypassing the Boilermakers

Scenario two of Northwestern qualifying for the conference tournament involves jumping Purdue. The Boilermakers are 12-13 overall and 4-10 in Big Ten play, featuring wins over Wisconsin and Washington, putting them two games ahead of the desperate Wildcats. However, unlike Indiana, Northwestern has a couple of things going for it in its quest to beat Purdue.

Firstly, Purdue has a tough schedule. The team plays Iowa and Maryland, both top-15 teams in the country, as well as Oregon, a team fighting for its NCAA tournament berth, before traveling to Evanston to play the ‘Cats. ESPN Matchup Predictor gives the Boilermakers less than a 15% chance of winning each of its next three games.

Thus, the odds say that Purdue will board its bus to Northwestern with a 4-13 conference record. If Northwestern can win one of its games against Illinois or Maryland, it will enter the March 1st showdown with Purdue sporting a 3-14 conference record. As discussed earlier, head-to-head victories prevail in the case of a tie in the BIG standings, so in this scenario, if Purdue loses its next three games and Northwestern wins one of its next two, Welsh-Ryan Arena would host a play-in game for the Big Ten Tournament. The winner would finish 15th in the conference standings and head to Indianapolis with postseason hopes still on its mind.

Once again, the formula: Purdue loses its next three games to Iowa, Maryland and Oregon plus Northwestern wins one of its next two games against Illinois or Maryland (let’s assume Illinois as it seems to be the much more winnable game). This would give the ‘Cats a chance to beat the Boilermakers in Evanston to advance to the conference tournament. For NU, the toughest hurdle is Illinois. But if the Wildcats can knock off the Fighting Illini, a team they lost to by just three earlier this season, the rest of the scenario feels much more attainable.

Overall, though bleak, Northwestern still has dreams of qualifying for the Big Ten postseason. If making a pie chart, the ‘Cats miss the tournament 90% of the time, hop the Hoosiers 1% of the time, and bypass the Boilermakers 9% of the time. Yet, throughout Coach McKeown’s storied career, all he’s needed was a chance.

Falcons edge rusher ranked among NFL's most undervalued free agents

Now that the Super Bowl is behind us and each of the head coaching vacancies have been filled, NFL teams are preparing for the start of free agency in March. That includes the Atlanta Falcons, who have a few key areas to address over the offseason.

Tight end Kyle Pitts is set to enter free agency and the Falcons have nobody on the roster capable of replacing the former top-five pick's production. Aside from Pitts, the team must figure out what to do at the edge rusher position.

Just a few weeks ago, Atlanta appeared to be set at the edge position for years to come. However, James Pearce Jr.'s recent arrest has changed things. Whether or not Pearce beats his five felony charges, he's likely to miss time next season for violating the NFL's personal conduct policy.

With that in mind, the Falcons need to find someone to replace Pearce in 2026, and they may not have to look very far. Former second-round pick Arnold Ebiketie is set to become a free agent and one analyst believes he could be an affordable replacement for Pearce.

NFL.com's Kevin Patra listed eight players who are likely to be overvalued or undervalued in free agency. Ebiketie was ranked as one of the most undervalued free agents.

"Although the former second-round pick has generated just 16.5 career sacks over four campaigns, he possesses explosiveness off the edge that could thrive under new leadership in Atlanta or in new surroundings," Patra wrote. "Despite seeing a career-low 370 snaps in 2025, his 16.4% pressure rate was the best of his career, per Next Gen Stats. In a league always in need of pass-rush help, Ebiketie could be a steal on a short-term prove-it deal."

The Falcons are lucky to have Ebiketie around since he knows the system and is unlikely to break the bank. The former Penn State standout was considered a breakout candidate in recent seasons, but he never took that next step.

Perhaps in a larger role, Ebiketie could thrive next season in Atlanta. NFL free agency officially opens on March 11 at 4 p.m. ET.

This article originally appeared on Falcons Wire: Falcons DE Arnold Ebiketie among most undervalued free agents

Arizona basketball's role players take advantage of opportunities

For much of the season, off to the side of his team’s historic 23-0 start, Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd was constantly dishing out patience to some of his players.

At least in his public explanations, Lloyd offered plenty of encouragement to Anthony Dell’Orso, that his shooting would come around when the Wildcats need it. 

Lloyd told high-potential but long-term prospect Sidi Gueye in December, after using him only sparingly, to start getting ready for a big-game appearance in about four weeks. (It actually took a little over eight weeks, but more on that later.)

And Lloyd apologized to grad transfer guard Evan Nelson, saying earlier this season he had to sit him while he developed his freshmen instead.

The player-coach talks were quite a bit different this week.

Before the No. 4 Wildcats beat No. 23 BYU 75-68 at McKale Center on Wednesday, Feb. 18, Lloyd had meetings with his team and individuals. Some of the words may have been obvious: Help was needed, ASAP, with starting forward Koa Peat out with a lower-leg strain, reserve forward Dwayne Aristode out for what Lloyd called a "short while" with an unspecified illness and starting guard Brayden Burries trying to play through some other sort of illness.

But there was also something of urgency to get across: Roles needed to be discussed, accepted, and excelled in — if the Wildcats were to avoid heading into a first-place showdown with Houston on Saturday, Feb. 21, on a three-game losing streak.

Typically, Lloyd described it all in measured tones.

“We had conversations, for sure, but it wasn't anything … you know, the house wasn't on fire,” he said. “We met because obviously we had to get our collective thoughts together to figure out what we wanted to do, if we wanted to play different lineups, have a different rotation, look at some different actions at both ends of the floor. We wanted to make sure we were efficient.

“We weren't just spraying darts.”

The result was visible immediately against BYU. While sixth man Tobe Awaka predictably moved into Peat’s starting role, Gueye was in the game after less than four minutes, making a highly unusual prime time appearance.

Gueye first came in to replace center Motiejus Krivas after the first three minutes, while Nelson hit the floor just over two minutes later to play alongside Jaden Bradley on the perimeter.

Meanwhile, Dell’Orso appeared with Gueye and hit his first 3-pointer just 32 seconds after that. Dell'Orso finished with a season-high 22 points and hit half of his eight 3-pointers, his best overall 3-point shooting effort since he went 4 for 7 from 3 and scored 20 points in UA’s 69-65 win over UCLA on Nov. 14.

Maybe it looked like the sense of urgency, the moment, was exactly the sort of push Dell’Orso needed to break out of the shooting slump he’s had most of the Big 12 season.

But, as always, expressing confidence in his straightaway style, Dell’Orso said that really wasn’t the case.

“Nah, really, no,” Dell’Orso said. “I mean, I could say some brought-on answer, but I go out every game like I can do it every game.”

Arizona Wildcats guard Anthony Dell’Orso (3) shoots a lay up during the first half of the game against the Brigham Young Cougars at McKale Memorial Center in Tucson, on Feb. 18, 2026.

Lloyd pretty much has said as much about Dell’Orso, defending his Aussie wing consistently during some rough stretches. While Dell’Orso scored in double-figures regularly and shot 33.3% from 3-point range during nonconference play, he entered the BYU game shooting only 23.5% from beyond the arc (8 of 34).

He had shown signs of a breakout coming, hitting 3 of 8 3-pointers over UA’s previous three games after making just 5 of 27 3s in nine Big 12 games before that.

But against the Cougars, Dell'Orso not only hit 4 of 8 3-pointers but went to the basket aggressively on several occasions, including a game-sealing dunk with 32 seconds left off a feed from Bradley.

“I kept telling you guys, I'm no panic” about Dell’Orso, Lloyd said. “I think Delly is gonna be ready to deliver when we need him most. Obviously, I couldn't have predicted it two or three weeks ago, but today, there was a significant need, and he stepped up.”

Dell’Orso’s shooting helped the Wildcats hit 9 of 21 3s against BYU, the fifth-most shots they have taken beyond the arc all season, having become known for preferring to pound the ball inside and make more free throws than their opponents attempt.

BYU (13 of 16) made more free throws than UA took (8 of 12), and the Cougars also outscored the Wildcats in the paint 30-26.

It was a different game. The Wildcats were a different team.

“I felt that we needed to shoot a few 3s,” Lloyd said. “I know you guys think I'm anti-3, and that's fine. I'll wear that. But I felt like we got some good looks, especially in the first half. I thought in the second half we should have taken a few more.

“It's hard for me when I look at the number and I see more 3-point attempts than free throw attempts. But that's what the game called for, and luckily, we knocked down nine of them.”

Dell’Orso said afterward that it “feels great,” but said that was true for everyone, with so many others also playing well in a time of particular need.

“It's good to get a win like that at home, after the week we went through,” he said.

The Wildcats' other key contributors included different ones and regular ones who were different. Ivan Kharchenkov, the often-demonstrative starting wing from Germany, slipped in 18 points on 7-for-12 shooting and pulled down seven rebounds, maybe before anybody knew it.

“Ivan has a quiet 18, is really efficient and plays some great defense,” Lloyd said. “Big-time effort by him.”

Gueye played just 10 minutes, but his presence was unusual and impossible to ignore. The lanky freshman from Senegal had four points, four rebounds and a steal — but three fouls — in 10 minutes.

He drew wild applause during a second-half sequence in which he threw in an alley-oop dunk off a feed from Bradley and then put in a basket on his offensive rebound.

The four-week wait had turned into eight weeks, but it was a big game that Gueye was finally a big part of.

“An opportunity arose... and Sidi did a great job," Lloyd said. "Our guys practice with him every day. They know how he can impact the game around the rim and how he can catch lobs. So I was really happy for Sidi. That was really kind of a shot in the arm for the crowd and for our team.”

Nelson didn’t get quite as noticeable a reaction and didn’t get to play at all in the second half. But he did hold his own during four first-half minutes, with a rebound and a steal.

“Evan played great,” Lloyd said. “He probably could have gotten another run. It's just how we were managing the game in the second half that he didn't get one.

"I think he's going to get a few more opportunities here in the next week or so, and I'm sure he'll take advantage of them.”

This article originally appeared on Arizona Republic: Arizona basketball's role players take advantage of opportunities

Documentary about ex-UW coach, player coming to Milwaukee

A documentary feature film about former University of Wisconsin men's basketball coach Howard Moore will open Friday, Feb. 20 in Milwaukee at the Marcus Majestic Cinema in Waukesha.

"A Road at Night," directed by John Roach, chronicles Moore's story and the deeply tragic 2019 car crash that killed Moore's wife and daughter; a heart attack after the incident left Moore disabled and needing long-term medical care. The family was struck by a drunk driver in Michigan.

Moore, a UW graduate and former basketball player, served as an assistant coach at UW under both head coaches Bo Ryan and Greg Gard.

The film includes interviews with Moore’s former coaches, teammates, family and friends, including Ryan, Gard, retired UW athletic director Barry Alvarez, former UW and NBA coach Stan Van Gundy, along with Badgers basketball legends Michael Finley, Rashard Griffith, Nigel Hayes-Davis, Frank Kaminsky, Jordan Taylor and Tracy Webster.

Former Wisconsin assistant coach Howard Moore is honored before his former team’s game against Illinois on Saturday, March 2, 2024, at the Kohl Center in Madison, Wisconsin. Moore suffered severe burns in a horrific automobile accident on Memorial Day weekend in 2019, resulting in the deaths of his wife and daughter. His son, Jerrell, suffered minor injuries.

Money raised from the screenings will go toward Moore's care.

The documentary has been screening in Madison at Marcus Theatres' Point Cinema, and both venues will continue showing the documentary through at least Feb. 26.

Tickets can be purchased on the movie's website. Donations can also be made directly at domoorefor34.com.

This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Documentary about ex-UW coach, player Howard Moore coming to Milwaukee

Man Utd, Atletico and a kit mix-up that means the WSL side have to wear their third strip at home

Manchester United Women will wear their black third kit instead of their traditional red home strip when they host Atletico Madrid in their Champions League quarter-final playoff second-leg on Thursday evening.

The kit change was requested five hours before kick-off after match officials deemed the orange goalkeeper shirt brought by the away side clashed with the hosts’ red outfield shirts.

According to a press release from United, a yellow shirt had originally been approved for the Atletico keeper to wear. “Naturally, United were preparing to wear red shirts, black shorts and black socks in front of our home support in Leigh,” the release stated.

However, an Atletico spokesperson stated that United uploaded to the UEFA app, with approval from both clubs, confirmation that the visitors would play in the orange goalkeeper shirt, not the yellow one.

Upon seeing the kit clash in person, match officials declared that a kit change was required. The Spanish side said due to having the kits pre-approved on the UEFA app, the team did not travel with both the orange and yellow shirts.

According to competition regulations, the responsibility to provide a solution to the kit clash belongs to the hosts. United will thus wear their third black kit in this evening’s match.

The Athletic has contacted Uefa for comment.

This is not the first time United have experienced kit trouble in their Champions League campaign this season. Last September, before their 1-0 defeat to SK Brann in a first-leg qualifier, several players’ boots went missing during the team’s trip to Bergen, Norway, from Manchester.

The club were forced to urgently purchase 15 pairs of replacement boots and 20 sets of shin guards from a local shop hours before kickoff.

United defeated Atletico 3-0 in the first leg of their quarter-final play-off match last week in Spain, with goals from Elisabeth Terland, Melvine Malard and Julia Zigiotti Olme.

The victory placed United in pole position for a place in the quarter-finals where, if they are successful, they will meet Bayern Munich.

United are without a number of players for Thursday’s second-leg, including Swedish full-back Anna Sandberg who could be out for up to eight weeks due to a knee injury she sustained in the first leg. They will also be without full-back Jayde Riviere, who was first off early in United’s 2-1 win Women’s Super League win against London City Lionesses.

United remain without Ella Toone and Leah Galton due to hip and back injuries respectively. Head coach Marc Skinner said Sweden winger Fridolina Rolfo could return for Sunday’s FA Cup fifth-round match against Chelsea.

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

Manchester United, Atlético Madrid, La Liga, Women's Soccer

2026 The Athletic Media Company

Trump ❤️ Infantino: "Yours is the job I’d love most"

Trump ❤️ Infantino:
Trump ❤️ Infantino: "Yours is the job I’d love most"

The president of the United States, Donald Trump, has once again showcased his close relationship with the top leader of FIFA, Gianni Infantino.

During the recent Peace Board summit in Washington, the American leader did not hold back on praise for the Swiss, highlighting the fundamental role that soccer will play in his plans for stability in the Gaza region.

In a relaxed moment of the event, Trump joked about the status of the attendees in front of the gaze of world leaders. "Here everyone is a head of state, except Gianni", noted the Republican, immediately adding: "but he is the head of soccer, so it's not that bad. Right, Gianni? I think your job is the one I like the most."

This camaraderie is not new. The alliance was definitively forged last December, when FIFA awarded Trump his first "Peace Prize". The world football governing body justified the award for the president's "extraordinary action" in conflict mediation, a recognition that Trump has publicly thanked on several occasions, comparing it to other international awards.

FIFA will contribute 75 million dollars for Gaza

The relationship between the two leaders now translates into a financial commitment of 75 million dollars that FIFA will help raise for Gaza. The plan includes sending world soccer stars to the area, a strategy that seeks to use the magnetism of sports idols to attract investment and promote peace in conflict territories.

With the 2026 World Cup on the horizon, organized by the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, the Trump-Infantino bond is emerging as the central axis of modern soccer. The American president sees soccer as a platform of unprecedented global influence, while Infantino secures a powerful ally in the White House for FIFA's expansion projects.

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here.

Zach Clemence sparks late Texas A&M comeback vs. Ole Miss

Texas A&M needed someone to steady the offense in winning time, and when the moment arrived, Zach Clemence delivered. The junior forward made a string of clutch plays in the final minutes, helping fuel the Aggies’ comeback win over Ole Miss at Reed Arena.

Clemence has quietly become one of A&M’s most reliable contributors, averaging nearly 14 points over his last three games while playing with a confidence that wasn’t always present earlier in the season. After the game, head coach Bucky McMillan praised Clemence’s growth, noting that he’s letting the game come to him and just being a ball player.

Offensive consistency has been a season‑long challenge for the Aggies, and Clemence is emerging as one of the bench pieces McMillan can trust to provide quality minutes. Against Ole Miss, he posted a +20 in 24 minutes and knocked down a massive field goal in the final two minutes to pull A&M within striking distance.

When asked about his mindset in those final moments, Clemence said:

"We just locked in down the stretch. We made adjustments. We wanted it more. That was all."

Ags come all the way back 😮‍💨#GigEm | #BuckyBallpic.twitter.com/Ztar2AUts9

— Texas A&M Basketball (@aggiembk) February 19, 2026

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Jarrett Johnson on X: @whosnextsports1.

This article originally appeared on Aggies Wire: Aggies get key bench boost from Zach Clemence in win over Ole Miss

It’s title shot or bust for Anthony 'Fluffy' Hernandez, the bleeping king of Yolo County

If the UFC ever did an event in Podunk, Anthony Hernandez would happily headline it. One of the things you’ll quickly learn about “Fluffy,” other than his vocabulary leads the UFC in four-letter words, is that he can’t stand the big city. That’s why plunking him down in the sprawling epicenter of Houston this weekend to take on Sean Strickland feels to him like a necessary evil.

It's just one of the compromises of being a middleweight contender, fighting in large metropolises. What he prefers is the skyscraper-less environs of rural Northern California, where the tallest building in his hometown — El Dorado Hills Fire Station No. 85 — stands 40-feet tall. And when you ask him where he’d like to be at the end of 2026, that’s where he places himself, right there at home, with a shiny accessory that’s too big to fit through ordinary belt loops.

“I would like to be back on my f***ing ranch with a title belt,” he says. “That’s what I want, to be out of the f***ing city. I f***ing hate the city. Sacramento has been cool to me. Everyone's been super nice to me. But yeah, no, I need to go back to Yolo County in the 530, where I’m from.”

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - AUGUST 09: Anthony Hernandez reacts after a submission victory against Roman Dolidze of Georgia in a middleweight fight during the UFC Fight Night event at UFC APEX on August 09, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada.  (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
Anthony Hernandez reacts after a submission victory against Roman Dolidze of Georgia in a middleweight fight during a UFC Fight Night on Aug. 9, 2025, in Las Vegas. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)
Jeff Bottari via Getty Images

You only live once, and Fluffy is doing it on a contender’s highwire. He has won eight fights in a row to place himself in what is widely presumed to be a title eliminator against ex-champ Strickland. These stages are always a Jenga puzzle, in that one misstep brings the whole body of work down. The pressure’s on because Houston is meant to be the continuation, not the end.

The thing is UFC matchmakers haven’t guaranteed Hernandez a title shot if he wins on Saturday night. At least not officially. And without that guarantee, fighting a tough out like Strickland can be a thankless task, especially when the end goal is to get nearer to Khamzat Chimaev’s belt. 

“I mean, like [Daniel Cormier] said, he’s never heard of anyone on an eight-fight win streak not getting a f***ing title shot,” Hernandez says. “If I go nine, I mean, I would expect to get a title. But if I got to keep proving myself, then so be it.” 

Chimaev, it should be noted, isn’t tracking to be the most prolific champion. Many, including Strickland, believe his defenses will be a once-a-year-occurrence, which makes title conversations that much more delicate. The UFC already has a ready-made 185-pound contender in Nassourdine Imavov (No. 2), who is ranked two spots above Hernandez (currently sitting at No. 4) in the UFC’s rankings. 

Yet there doesn’t seem to be any rush to get Imavov into the cage with Chimaev, either. 

How things play out Saturday will determine the UFC’s course, yet Chimaev hovers over the proceedings like a Chechen phantasm, and he’s where all arrows are aimed. After racking up over 21 minutes of control time in his title-clinching fight against Dricus du Plessis at UFC 319, Chimaev solidified himself as the most relentless wrestler in the division (if not the UFC), which made Strickland’s declaration about Hernandez’s ability all the more outlandish. 

Strickland said last week he thought Fluffy was a better wrestler than Chimaev, which some people saw as gamesmanship. Then again, it could just be Strickland being Strickland. 

“I’m not even a wrestler, so I mean dope, you know what I mean?” Hernandez says. “Because I grew up f***ing striking, so I mean … I know how to wrestle, yes, but I feel like I’m a mixed martial artist. I wouldn’t say that I’m great at one thing. If I was the f***ing best boxer in the world, I’d be boxing. I’m f***ing pretty good at all this s***, and when I get to combine them into my own world, I’m great at it. So yeah, that's it.”

Hernandez doesn’t have any bad blood with Strickland, whom he exchanged numbers with at one point and invited to come train with him in California. But business is business, and right now Strickland stands in his way. At 32 years old, Hernandez is in his prime. It’s one of the reasons he’d like his chance against Chimaev, who right now looks like a tyrant atop the ranks. 

Hernandez doesn’t necessarily see him that way. 

“I think he likes to wrestle and hug people,” he says. “He doesn't get hurt. The times that he’s tried to bang with people he was a weight bully, he missed weight, beat up little 55s that came up to 70. I don't know. At one time I had an interaction with him. He’s a punk, so I don’t really f*** with the guy, and personally I would like to f*** him up. So it is what it is, but I’m coming. So either get rid of the f***ing belt or fight me.”

That interaction occurred at UFC 273 in 2022, when Hernandez fought Josh Fremd and Chimaev took on Gilbert Burns. Hernandez says he tried to be friendly only to be shut down.

“He just mad-dogged me,” Hernandez says. “He was like, ‘No.’ I'm like, ‘What the f***, bro?’ I'm trying to be respectful and s***. I mean, we're not fighting. I wasn't even fighting him. 

“I don’t know, some people just rub me the wrong way, you know what I mean? We're all f***ing athletes. We're all f***ing cutting weight and we're all f***ing being respectful, mother****er. You know what I mean? I don't know if it's just different cultural understanding of language and barriers and s***, I don't know. He just came off like a punk.”

That fight, should it happen, would be interesting in that it would bring two dictating forces together. In his last three fights, Hernandez has been somewhat of a tyrant himself, racking up nearly eight minutes of control time against Roman Dolidze in his last fight, over 10 minutes against Brendan Allen and over 15 minutes against Michel Pereira, while scoring 23 takedowns all told. Much like Chimaev, Hernandez’s plan is to win by onslaught. To break the will of the man in front of him.

Hernandez has shown a high level of dog in his fights, which is to say, an ability to up the level of mean to meet every occasion. 

“Yeah, I don't know where that comes from,” he says. “I know that when you lock me in a cage with someone, people b**** up, and that's not the case for me. You know what I mean?” 

That’s why he’s in the cosmopolitan sprawl of Houston, with the main-event spotlight shining down on him. Because he doesn’t b**** up once the cage locks. 

“Sometimes I go in there with a game plan, but it doesn't always work out perfectly,” he says. “But I understand this game very well. So with that being said, I’m the captain of the f***ing ship. They send me to war, and then the rest is feedback from everyone.”

Hernandez has more relatives in Texas and Oklahoma than he does in California, many of whom will be on hand to see him fight at the Toyota Center. He says he will have strong support in Houston, but other than punching his ticket to a title shot, the thing he’s most looking forward to is getting the hell out of there. 

Dodgers re-sign pitcher traded in blockbuster deal with Cubs

The Los Angeles Dodgers have signed veteran right-hander Yency Almonte, whom they traded to Chicago in the January 2024 deal that also sent Michael Busch to the Cubs.

MORE:Cubs lose 5-year veteran infielder to Blue Jays

Almonte, 31, hasn’t pitched at the big league level since 2024, when injuries limited him to 17 games. He’s 8-6 with a 4.44 ERA in 213 career games, all out of the bullpen, for the Colorado Rockies (2018-21), Dodgers and Cubs.

The minor league contract brings Almonte back to the team he pitched for from 2022-23. Over two seasons in Los Angles, Almonte went 3-2 with a 3.35 ERA in 82 games.

Almonte posted this morning he was already at Camelback Ranch (h/t to @JeffSpiegel)

— Fabian Ardaya (@FabianArdaya) February 19, 2026

In 2025, Almonte split the season between the Cubs’ advanced Class-A and Double-A affiliates, allowing four earned runs in 19.1 innings (1.86 ERA) in 15 games.

Almonte faces a long road if he intends to crack a bullpen bolstered by the top reliever on the free agent market, Edwin Diaz, who signed a three-year, $69 million contract with the Dodgers in December.

In 2022, his first season in Los Angeles, Almonte used his 6-foot-5 frame to his advantage, playing up his 96-mph fastball with elite extension. That season, opponents swung and missed at 33.5 percent of his pitches, and limited hard contact to the tune of a .306 slugging percentage.

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Flick holds important meeting with Barcelona staff and squad after back-to-back losses

Flick holds important meeting with Barcelona staff and squad after back-to-back losses
Flick holds important meeting with Barcelona staff and squad after back-to-back losses

Barcelona are not having a good time right now. After suffering a 4-0 defeat at the hands of Atletico Madrid in the first leg of the Copa del Rey semifinals, they lost 2-1 to local rivals Girona.

The defeat at Montilivi meant Barcelona had to relinquish their position at the top of the league table, with Real Madrid now becoming the new league leaders.

Coach Hansi Flick is clearly not happy with how things are going now and has taken some necessary steps to try and mitigate the problem.

Important meeting with squad and staff

According to SPORT, Flick held a lengthy meeting with his staff and the squad earlier in the day.

After two days off from training, Flick focused on fine-tuning details and engaging in extended discussions with the dressing room following two consecutive defeats.

Barcelona will be boosted by the return of Pedri this weekend. (Photo by David Ramos/Getty Images)

This roughly 60-hour disconnection was an unusual decision designed to let the squad breathe and return with recharged batteries before it was too late.

Upon returning to the training facilities this Thursday, the players were greeted with this very long talk.

Instead of heading straight to the grass, the team did not take to the pitch until around 12:10 PM. Flick utilised this time for a prolonged “group therapy” session lasting over an hour to mentally reset his men.

The manager emphasised returning to the core tactical points that previously brought them success, such as intense high pressure and maintaining order in the lines.

He also stressed the importance of avoiding losses in delicate areas and perfecting their overall tactical positioning.

This crucial reset aims to prepare the team for their upcoming clash next Sunday against Levante, where two of the key players have returned to normal training, as well star midfielder Pedri.

Sidney Crosby injury update provides some clarity

When Sidney Crosby left the ice with an apparent injury during Canada’s preliminary round matchup, the hockey world held its breath. The veteran captain — the emotional and strategic heartbeat of Team Canada — disappeared down the tunnel, sparking immediate concern about whether his Olympic journey had come to an abrupt end. Now, optimism is beginning to build.


MORE: Sidney Crosby exits Olympic hockey game with scary injury

A Positive Turn

Sidney Crosby of Canada walks out to the ice
Sidney Crosby of Canada walks out to the ice before a men’s ice hockey quarterfinal during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

According to team officials, Crosby’s injury is not believed to be long-term, and there is growing confidence that he could return before the medal rounds conclude. While Hockey Canada has not provided a definitive timetable, early evaluations reportedly avoided worst-case scenarios — a massive relief for a Canadian squad with gold medal aspirations.

Head coach Jon Cooper and staff have emphasized caution, but they’ve also stopped short of ruling him out. In tournament play, that distinction matters.

What Crosby Means to Canada

At 38, Crosby remains one of the most complete players in international hockey. His impact stretches far beyond the scoresheet:

  • Elite faceoff ability in critical moments
  • Defensive awareness against top opposing lines
  • Calm leadership in high-pressure situations
  • Championship pedigree, including two Olympic gold medals

Canada is deep — stacked with NHL stars across all four lines — but Crosby’s presence changes the complexion of every game. He draws defensive attention, elevates linemates, and settles the bench during momentum swings. Simply put, Canada without Crosby is still dangerous. Canada, with Crosby, is overwhelming.

Timing Is Everything

Feb 12, 2025; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; [Imagn Images direct customers only] Team Canada forward Sidney Crosby (87) prepares for a face-off against Team Sweden in the second period during a 4 Nations Face-Off ice hockey game at Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images

The key question now becomes timing. Olympic tournaments are unforgiving. One bad period can end a medal dream. If Crosby can return in time for the semifinals or finals, should Canada get there, it could provide a massive emotional and tactical boost. Even a limited version of the veteran captain would give Canada an edge in tight, late-game scenarios.

Teammates have remained publicly confident, describing Crosby as “determined” and “doing everything possible” to get back on the ice.

A Familiar Olympic Script?

Crosby has a history of delivering in defining moments on this stage — most famously scoring the “Golden Goal” in Vancouver. The idea that he could battle back from injury and re-enter the tournament just as elimination games begin feels almost cinematic.

For now, Canada waits. But the door is open. And if Sidney Crosby does step back onto Olympic ice, the rest of the tournament may have just gotten a lot more complicated.

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Stephen A. Smith fires off strong message to Kansas freshman Darryn Peterson

Dave Portnoy cooks Stephen A. Smith after ESPN blunder

Stephen A. Smith fires off strong message to Kansas freshman Darryn Peterson originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

One of the most intriguing — and at times confusing — storylines in college basketball this season has been Kansas Jayhawks star freshman and top NBA prospect Darryn Peterson.

Peterson has missed 11 games this season due to a variety of issues, and he has also sat out significant portions of games due to cramping — most recently Wednesday night in Kansas’ win over Oklahoma State.

After making a shot, Peterson signaled to Kansas head coach Bill Self to take him out of the game, despite showing no visible issues. He appeared in just 18 minutes but still led the team in scoring with 23 points, while the other four starters each played 30-plus minutes.

Self has defended Peterson all season amid scrutiny over missed games and limited minutes, but even he seemed surprised when Peterson asked to be removed.

“We've had this happen more than a couple of times,” Self said after the game. “I thought he was good to go. We only got 18 minutes out of him. That’s disappointing, because he could’ve had a really big night.”

MORE: ESPN's Jay Williams warns NBA teams about Darryn Peterson

Bill Self on Darryn Peterson checking himself out:

“We've had this happen more than a couple of times. I thought he was good to go. We only got 18 minutes out of him. That's disappointing, because he could've had a really big night.”

(via @TheFieldOf68)pic.twitter.com/8dJ1guefF6

— Legion Hoops (@LegionHoops) February 19, 2026

Joining in on the backlash surrounding Peterson, who could be the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NBA draft, was ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith, who directed a blunt message to the 19-year-old.

“Let me say this. There is no team in hell that should grab Darryn Peterson at No. 1,” Smith said. “You cannot do it. The first ability is availability. My brother, Darryn Peterson, I hope you’re watching because I’m talking directly to him… what the hell is going on? You are a college player. There’s 24–25 games, he’s already missed about 11–12. You pull yourself out? You make a J, then look at the coach, ‘I want to get out of here,’ and it’s not the first time he’s done it.

“I can’t believe what I’m seeing from this guy. This guy is a sensational player… this is business. I can’t trust him. You cannot be trusted. The NBA is a business, it’s 82 regular-season games… you’re invoking your own load management. You are a freshman in college. How can I trust you? How can I invest in you?”

"There is no team in hell that should grab Darryn Peterson at No. 1. ... [Peterson] cannot be trusted."@stephenasmith SOUNDS OFF on Peterson's availability this season 🗣️ pic.twitter.com/WRq5gswRrv

— First Take (@FirstTake) February 19, 2026

Peterson has played 30-plus minutes in just six of the 15 games he’s appeared in for the Jayhawks this season.

Kansas will return to action at home on Saturday against Cincinnati. As of now, there is no injury designation for the freshman as the team heads into the final stretch of the regular season, leading into the conference tournament and March Madness.

More NCAA news: 

GB men into Olympic final as women squeezed out

Team GB celebrate
[PA]

Bruce Mouat and his rink have guaranteed Team GB's fourth medal of these Winter Olympics after seeing off unbeaten Switzerland 8-5 to reach the men's curling final in Cortina.

The British quartet - who are the reigning world champions - will face Canada in Saturday's final (18:05 GMT), looking to upgrade the silver medal they won four years ago in Beijing.

But that is the least these four Scots will achieve in these Games in Italy.

Mouat, Grant Hardie, Hammy McMillan and Bobby Lammie came here top of the world rankings and targeting nothing other than what the emotional skip called "our gold medal" in the immediate aftermath.

And for all they struggled in the round robin and only earned their place in the medal-matches thanks to Italy losing on Thursday morning, they now stand one step away from achieving that ambition.

"It will be the biggest match of our lives and we're so excited to get that opportunity again," vice-skip Grant Hardie told BBC Sport.

However, Britain's women had their own dreams shattered earlier in the day in the most dramatic of circumstances.

Rebecca Morrison's rink needed to beat Italy​ in their final round-robin match, and they did. The other part of the equation was that Switzerland had to overcome the United States.

But the Swiss were unable to do their bit - despite coming from three down to force a nerve-shredding extra end - rendering Britain's 7-4 victory over the hosts moot.

Mistakes and magic swing epic contest

Having a shot at any colour of medal looked beyond the heavily-touted British men as recently as Wednesday morning.

But their most accomplished performance to date - against the United States - served notice of their threat and they came into the matches that matter most, stress-tested in a way the Swiss had not been.

Indeed, the closest Yannick Schwaller's men had come to defeat here was in being taken to an extra end by the GB quartet on Sunday.

But Switzerland had played on this sheet earlier in the day and initially adapted better to the conditions, taking two in the second to cleave open an advantage.

In other matches this week, a slow start has cost the British rink but they responded much better this time, Mouat levelling the scores with a composed draw in the third.

These are arguably the two best teams in the world right now, but mistakes were playing a part in a contest that lacked the high-grade quality of their earlier meeting.

A Mouat misjudgement allowed the Swiss to take another two in the fourth and open a 4-3 lead at the break, but the errors were coming from both sides.

And in the sixth, we had one that changed the whole tenor of the contest.

Switzerland had a shot at three with their final throw. But the attempt glanced one of their own stones on the way through and skittered right through the house to give Britain a steal and fresh hope at 4-4.

The Swiss nudged back ahead in the seventh, but only by one after a fabulous Mouat shot averted a curling catastrophe, and the GB skip then added two of his own to the board to give his rink the lead for the first time with two ends left.

What did the Swiss have in response? They opted to blank the ninth, meaning two in the final end would put them in the final and given them revenge for their World Championship final defeat last April.

It came down to the final stone but Benoit Schwarz-van Berkel was a fraction off and that fraction has secured at least a silver medal for Team GB.

"That's probably the hardest-fought win we've ever had and glad we brought our best when it really mattered," second Bobby Lammie told BBC Sport.

Standings
[BBC]

Women do their bit... but luck runs out

The women's team - European silver medallists last year - had really grown into this tournament since losing their opening two matches.

Needing three closing wins to put themselves into the semi-final conversation, they snatched an incredible final-stone win over the United States and executed a composed dismantling of Japan - both on Wednesday.

Italy - their closing round-robin opponents - were below them in the standings but had also belatedly found form and wanted to end their home Games in style.

Morrison's rink controlled throughout, though.

They were 4-1 ahead after four ends and, although the Italians did cut that lead, the Scottish quartet managed the game well and eased clear again late on to earn a fifth win in their last seven matches.

However, after the immediate celebrations, they could only watch on askance as the already-qualified Swiss fell just short in the extra end and allowed the US to dash the British team's dreams of an incredible medal with a 7-6 win.

"We're absolutely gutted by so, so proud," skip Sophie Jackson told BBC Sport, standing next to her tearful team-mates. "We have a tough start to the week and we did everything but we could but just left it too late."

More to follow.

Trial Date for Guardians Pitchers Clase, Ortiz Could Be Delayed Until Fall

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The trial for MLB pitchers Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz accused of participating in a gambling scheme is likely headed for a fall start. 

Key Takeaways

  • The initial May 4 trial date could be postponed until October. 

  • Emmanuel Clase and Luis Ortiz face multiple gambling-related charges. 

  • A federal indictment accused them of rigging pitches and accepting payoffs to help two Dominican Republic bettors. 

The Associated Press reported that Judge Kiyo A. Matsumoto initially booked a May 4 trial, but she indicated during Wednesday’s hearing that the court case against the Cleveland Guardians pitchers will be postponed until October. 

Clase and Ortiz pleaded not guilty to money laundering, wire fraud conspiracy, and other gambling-related charges in November 2025. Both players were placed on non-disciplinary leave in July 2025 after an investigation emerged about potential game manipulation. It's one of the latest incidents of athletes betting on sports.

Serious allegations

Federal prosecutors allege that the Guardians duo accepted thousands of dollars in payments to rig pitches to help two bettors in the Dominican Republic profit. 

The unnamed Dominican Republic bettors would wager on pitch-level props that have since been banned at U.S. sportsbooks. They allegedly made at least $460,000 on the scheme. Their attorneys deny claims of collusion with bettors. 

Clase, who allegedly set up the scheme and recruited Ortiz, is accused of manipulating pitches in 48 games over two years, according to an unsealed indictment. Clase is accused of using code words like “rooster” and “chicken” in text messages to tip off what he would be throwing. 

Some scheme details

Clase, who was a dominant closer for Cleveland, claims that the texts were about a legal cockfighting ring and not the game-manipulation accusations.

Prosecutors said in the indictment that Clase was told to “throw a rock at the first rooster in today’s fight” before a game on May 18, 2025. Clase agreed, replying with “that’s an easy toss to that rooster.”

However, Clase didn’t play in that game. He also broke league rules by using a phone in a game the previous day to alert the bettors about a pitch outside the strike zone, leading to a $27,000 win, according to the indictment. 

Ortiz’s lawyers claim he did not know about the gambling scheme. His attorneys have requested that Ortiz, who allegedly was involved in two suspect games, be tried separately, and they also asked for a later trial date than this spring. 

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Former UF linebacker's latest mural spreads Gator pride at Gator Beverage

Gainesville knows it’s great to be a Florida Gator — and it doesn’t shy away from reminding others of it every day.

Former Florida Gator linebacker, co-captain of the 1996 national championship team, and artist James “Batesy” Bates said he can back that up with a mural.

Bates told The Sun on Feb. 16 that his latest mural, “Damn, It Feels Good to Be a Gator,” was installed outside Gator Beverage, 126 W. University Ave., in January.

Former Florida Gators co-captain and linebacker James Bates poses in front of his new mural, "Damn, It Feels Good to be a Gator," outside Gator Beverage, 1126 W. University Ave., in Gainesville.

“I love to share my art, especially with Gainesville,” Bates said. “This is such an iconic spot in the city, and to have my art here — with my students and my daughters always talking about Gator Beverage — it’s sort of a full-circle moment for me and my time here.”

The mural features an orange gator wearing only Nike shoes and holding a Coca-Cola bottle, painted over old Gainesville Sun newspapers highlighting past championships.

Known for often including a top hat in his work, Bates said the tipping off the orange "Gator Bev" visor is a nod to his former “Head Ball Coach,” Steve Spurrier. Instead of tossing an orange onto the field, the gator tips it to fellow Gators.

Bates said Gainesville holds a special place in his heart, allowing him to live and work in a community that supports local artists and businesses. Calling Gator Beverage a local, iconic location, he said businesses like it are becoming increasingly rare as fewer long-standing Gainesville staples remain.

Now teaching sports play-by-play announcing at his alma mater, Bates said his students and daughters recognize his artwork at Gator Beverage, home of the popular social media account “Liquor Store 352.”

Nicknamed the “Liquor Store Bros,” the comedy account features Gator Beverage staff offering cocktail tips and playfully teasing customers who have just turned 21. The account has amassed more than 900,000 YouTube subscribers and over 700,000 followers on TikTok.

Bates said the idea for the mural came from John Browning, Coca-Cola’s regional general manager for North Florida, whom he met at the unveiling of the Todd Golden portrait at Spurrier’s Gridiron Grille following the Gator men's basketball team's 2025 championship.

The mural is framed in white, with classic Coke bottle caps left unpainted or painted orange, blue, or white. Bates’ friend and retired house builder Gary Heinicka assisted with the final framing touches.

Gator Beverage co-owner Ryan Barnett said he and Bates first discussed the mural in late May or early June 2025.

Barnett, who owns the store with his father, began working there at age 18 while attending UF. He said he vividly remembers the 1996 championship game, recalling driving with his dad and seeing burned couches and crowds celebrating in the streets.

“I’m a huge fan of the Spurrier days and certainly cheered James on a lot,” Barnett said. “He brought so much team spirit to a team and a town that fully appreciated how special it is to have a football program that not only wins, but creates a culture — a culture of memories.”

This article originally appeared on The Gainesville Sun: James Bates mural at Gator Beverage in Gainesville Florida

Former Miami Dolphins WR Isaiah Ford joins Bears coaching staff

NASHVILLE, TN - JANUARY 2: Isaiah Ford #87 of the Miami Dolphins motions before a play during an NFL game against the Tennessee Titans at Nissan Stadium on January 2, 2022 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

A former Miami Dolphins 7th-round draft pick (237th overall) has decided to get into coaching.

According to the Chicago Bears’ official site, Isaiah Ford will be joining Ben Johnson’s coaching staff for the 2026 NFL season.

We have made several changes to the coaching staff ⤵️

— Chicago Bears (@ChicagoBears) February 18, 2026

Ford, 30, played four seasons with the Miami Dolphins, catching 63 of 97 targets for 68 yards and 2 touchdowns.

Despite only appearing in 32 career games with the Dolphins (3 Career Starts), he also spent time with the New England Patriots, Indianapolis Colts, and Chicago Bears. During his time in Miami, Ford was given the nickname “boomerang” (It me!) for his ability to always come back, even after being cut from the roster or sent to the practice squad.

Last week, I mentioned the potential of Terrace Marshall Jr. and how he was once on my list of WRs I was excited about. Isaiah Ford was also one of those players. In fact, for those of you who may remember, Aaron Sutton and I did a film breakdown on Ford after he landed in Miami.

Obviously, he never became an all-star player, but he did fill out a vital role on the roster. Hell, he even caught Tua Tagovailoa’s first touchdown pass. And now, despite having a long shot even to make it in the league, he will be an offensive quality control coach under one of the league’s brightest offensive minds.

Goodluck, Isaiah Ford. We’re rooting for you!

What are your thoughts on Isaiah Ford joining the Chicago Bears coaching staff? Let us know in the comments section below!

Joe Gomez Fit to Start Against Nottingham Forest

KIRKBY, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 13: (THE SUN OUT, THE SUN ON SUNDAY OUT) Joe Gomez of Liverpool during a training session at AXA Training Centre on February 13, 2026 in Kirkby, England. (Photo by Andrew Powell/Liverpool FC via Getty Images) | Liverpool FC via Getty Images

While Liverpool have at various times so far this season dealt with injury issues around the pitch and in various position groups, the most common problem spot has been at right back and it’s not even close. At the moment, it’s a situation that sees Conor Bradley out for the season and Jeremie Frimpong at least a week away.

Add in Watau Endo’s recent broken foot filling in there and it’s basically become Liverpool’s meat grinder of a position in 2025-26. There’s at least a little good news for head coach Arne Slot on the horizon, though, because after a pair of appearances off the bench Joe Gomez is match fit and ready to start against Nottingham.

“Yeah, I think he is,” Slot said when asked about Gomez’ potential availability ahead of this weekend’s kickoff. “Jeremie will not be involved yet this weekend, but we hope that he will be next week if everything goes as planned, and—as I said earlier—Wata will be out for a long time. We don’t know exactly how long, but long.”

In other injury and fitness news, striker Alexander Isak returned to solo training and light work on the pitch this week and is targeting a return to team training over the next month with a potential return to action pencilled in for either late in March or early in April, giving him around a month to be involved before the season ends.

Kyle Busch won all the time until the checkered flags dried up. Can he find NASCAR success again?

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) — Kyle Busch’s feisty spirit surfaced late at the end of another empty Daytona 500 for the perennial race loser. The Daytona pole sitter, Busch was running outside the top 20 in the final laps when he let off the gas and faded to the back of the pack as wrecks up front started to muddle the running order. His crew chief radioed Busch and asked if he slowed because the Toyota was out of fuel.

Busch’s retort was blunter.

“What the (heck) am I going to rush into the wreck for,” Busch said. “We’re running (expletive) 30th.”

Busch finished 15th, another middling result as he ran the longest active Daytona 500 losing streak to 21 straight races. Whatever spark winning the pole may have provided never materialized with only 19 laps led. The optimism of racing for the first time in a points race with a new crew chief faded early, and Busch was left to chew on the fact that a Daytona 500 win remained the lone void in a career that will eventually see him join big brother Kurt in the Hall of Fame.

“If I don’t ever win it, I’m going to have to be happy with not ever winning it,” Busch said. “I’ve pretty much fulfilled my career. If it were to end yesterday, I would be happy with everything.”

Just not much of late.

At 40, Busch is reeling on a once-inconceivable, 94-race Cup Series losing streak, and he has turned in a contract year to a new crew chief at Richard Childress Racing to resuscitate his career — all while embroiled in an $8.5 million lawsuit against an insurance company — to remind everyone that he can still hang on as a championship contender.

“It’s something I never would have thought would happen," Busch said.

How did Kyle Busch fall off?

Through the first two decades of his career, one detail showed no signs of changing: Busch was a winner.

Take 2008, Busch’s first season with Joe Gibbs Racing. He won eight races in the Cup Series, 10 more in NASCAR’s second-tier series and, for good measure, three in the Truck Series.

“Literally, these words came out of my mouth: ‘See, it can be easy,’” Busch said with a laugh.

Busch made it look easy. He won Cup titles with Gibbs in 2015 and 2019 and romped through NASCAR’s lower two series with so much ease that rules were put in place to choke off his number of races each season.

“We were just laughing,” Busch said. “It can be easy. It’s just a matter of how well-prepared you are and how good your stuff is.”

Busch’s stuff was good enough to win 232 times — a NASCAR record — across the three national series. Busch moved to Richard Childress Racing in 2023, and he showed flashes he was the same elite racer as he was at JGR with three wins in the first 15 races of the season.

Then, the checkered flags dried up.

Busch’s career tapered off, both inexplicably because of his Hall of Fame talent, yet understandably because RCR had long receded from its spot as a championship contender in the Cup Series.

Busch admits there are days he still finds it unfathomable he won’t finish his career at JGR. After he flamed out early in his career at Hendrick Motorsports, Busch found a fit driving for the former NFL coach.

He had the best of everything in the No. 18 Toyota, fueled in large part by the financial support of longtime sponsor Mars. Even as recently as 2020, Busch believed there was a shot he could finish his career with the same seven career titles as record-holders Jimmie Johnson, Dale Earnhardt and Richard Petty.

Once Mars pulled out of the sport after 2022, Busch and JGR failed to land the timely sponsorship deal that infuses teams with the big payday largely needed to operate.

Busch was unceremoniously out as JGR made room for Joe Gibbs’ grandson, Ty.

“When I don’t have a sponsor, and they have a grandkid waiting in the wings, I’m the odd man out,” Busch said. “I wanted to stay there, finish my career there and never leave. It was the same thing at Hendrick. I got forced out there. I got forced out at Gibbs.”

Childress, who tussled with Busch in 2011 after a Truck Series race at Kansas Speedway, offered the professional lifeline needed in the No. 8 Chevrolet.

The pairing initially seemed perfect — Busch won the second race of the 2023 season at Fontana, eight races later at Talladega and five races after that at Gateway. He followed that with four straight top-10 finishes and seemingly had brought that taste of the good life with him from JGR to RCR.

Busch said in retrospect he realized wins came in large part because RCR had been ahead of the curve when NASCAR launched its Next Gen car in 2022.

“RCR was actually involved in a lot of the car’s development in the early stages with NASCAR,” Busch said. “They were one of the first teams to work on things and get ahead of it. (At JGR), we didn’t do anything. We were like, ‘Nah, we’re not going to do anything. We’ll deal with it when we get there.’”

Gibbs and Hendrick and Team Penske soon caught up — and surpassed — Busch and RCR. Even 23XI Racing sped ahead after winning the Daytona 500 with Tyler Reddick.

“The RCR gang, for whatever they were ahead, just seemed to plateau,” Busch said. “The competition crossed us over and they’re much better. We’re trying to play catch-up.”

Busch posted just 10 top 10s each of the last two seasons. He is not even a playoff driver, much less racing for a third championship.

“Honestly, if you’re not with a Gibbs team or a Hendrick team or a Penske team, it doesn’t seem like many other teams win races,” Busch said.

RCR shook up Busch’s race team this season and plucked crew chief Jim Pohlman away from Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s developmental series race team. Pohlman won the former Xfinity Series championship in 2024 with Justin Allgaier — and raised the standard within the RCR team.

“We need to win,” Busch said. “We’ve got to win.”

Can Bush recover in 2026?

Busch hasn’t set a timetable on his career and said he won’t continue to race for purely financial reasons, even as he claimed he is out $10.4 million and filed suit in October alleging Pacific Life Insurance Company failed to reveal the true risks of the policies, along with providing false and negligent representations of what was supposed to be tax-free income for retirement.

“It’s only driven by my passion for it,” Busch said. “The monetary value of my career is irrelevant right now.”

Busch’s son, Brexton, turns 11 this year and has followed his father’s path into racing. He’ll race Legends cars and in the junior late model series this year, and dad still has hopes father and son can race against each other in Trucks once Brexton turns 17.

Busch can’t stomach limping to the NASCAR career finish line without celebrating more wins, more championships. Careers rarely end on high notes for NASCAR’s greats: Petty won his 200th career race in 1984 and never again when he retired in 1992. Johnson was still in championship form when he won his third race of 2017 in June — and never again over the final 3 1/2 years of his full-time career.

“At some point, it starts drying up,” Johnson said. “It did for me and it will for others. None of us know where that is for Kyle right now until he decides to step away. But there is a moment out there for everyone where production just goes down. Whatever it is, it dries up. I hope that isn’t the case for him. He’s such a talent.”

___

AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

'To improve the depth' - Farke explains Buonanotte signing

Facundo Buonanotte plays for Leeds United in their home white shirt
[Getty Images]

Daniel Farke says Facundo Buonanotte's slow start since joining Leeds on loan was to be expected and has stressed the forward has been brought in to offer depth rather than immediate first-team impact.

Buonanotte, 21, joined on loan from Brighton in January and has made three appearances, most recently being withdrawn after 45 minutes of his only start in an FA Cup win at Birmingham.

Farke said "expectations" and "excitement" around a signing are always prevalent but he did not expect a fast start from a player who has struggled for consistent football, having spent much of his recent career on loan at Leicester,Chelsea and now Leeds.

Farke explained: "This is the message I gave him from when he arrived - we haven't signed him to improve our 11 straight away. We signed him to improve the depth in our squad. We let Jack Harrison go out on loan and Harry Gray out on loan. We spoke openly with Facundo about it. We want to make sure we hold the pressure high on our other options.

"We just like his potential. I told him 'I don't write you off after one poor half'. I was half expecting this."

Farke says it is a good thing that Buonanotte has not immediately commanded a first-team place, as it would mean Leeds did not already own attackers of adequate calibre.

He explained that if Buonanotte instantly improved the team, Leeds would probably need to purchase an attacker like him in the near future, at a cost of £30-40m.

Farke continued: "It's never easy - we give you the stage, support and arm around the shoulder. We don't expect you to cut this league into pieces. It is step by step. If it works out - great, if not it's a loan for both sides, not a big risk.

"He didn't have his best game in the FA Cup game but it's also a bit realistic. If you bring a player in who has rarely played a game, this is what happens sometimes. He's in a challenging position."

Former OU defensive coordinator lands with SEC foe

Head coach Brent Venables and the Oklahoma Sooners will see another familiar face on the opposing sideline in 2026 in the SEC. After a number of players from the 2025 roster transferred to SEC schools that are on the schedule for OU in 2026, there's a name Sooner Nation will surely recognize that will be coaching against Oklahoma next year as well.

Former OU defensive coordinator Mike Stoops has been hired to a role on Ole Miss head coach Pete Golding's coaching staff, per multiple reports. Stoops was most recently the inside linebackers coach at Kentucky, where he worked for his brother Mark Stoops, from 2022 to 2025. It's not known at this time what Stoops' role will be, but one would have to think he'll be working with the defense, given his extensive experience on that side of the ball.

Stoops reunites with Golding, as the pair coached together at Alabama in 2019 and 2020. In between, he was the defensive coordinator at FAU in 2021.

Ole Miss has added Mike Stoops to its staff. He was most recently ILB coach at Kentucky. The Iowa alum has made stops at Kansas State, Oklahoma, Alabama, FAU and was a head coach at Arizona for seven seasons. More here at @OMSpiritOn3

🔗 https://t.co/zhX5iyEDACpic.twitter.com/8GlwofYqyc

— Zach Berry (@Zach_Berry) February 18, 2026

Stoops' coaching career began when he was a graduate assistant at Iowa in 1986 and 1987. In 1991, he was the Hawkeyes' linebackers and defensive backs coach. From 1992 to 1998, Stoops worked at Kansas State, beginning as a defensive ends coach and working his way up the ladder. During his first decade of coaching, he coached under two icons in Iowa's Hayden Fry and Kansas State's Bill Snyder.

Of course, Mike is the brother of Hall of Fame former Oklahoma head coach Bob Stoops. When Bob left his post as Steve Spurrier's defensive coordinator at Florida to take the OU job ahead of the 1999 season, he took Mike from Kansas State, where he was the co-defensive coordinator and defensive backs coach, with him to have the same role in Norman.

Venables also came over from Kansas State, getting a promotion from linebackers coach to co-defensive coordinator/LBs coach at OU. Together, Mike and Venables oversaw the Oklahoma defense from 1999 to 2003, with Mike calling the plays. Oklahoma went undefeated and won the national championship in 2000.

Then, Mike left to become the head coach at Arizona, where he served from 2004 to 2011. During that same timeframe, Venables assumed play-calling duties and became the sole DC for the Sooners. Mike went 41-50 as the head coach in Tucson, and was fired midway through the 2011 season.

When Mike was hired back on as the co-defensive coordinator at Oklahoma ahead of the 2012 season to work alongside Venables again, Venables instead left to take the same role at Clemson, where he would get to continue calling plays. From 2012 to 2018, Mike had sole control of the OU defense. However, his second stint did not go nearly as well as his first, as the Sooners became one of the worst defenses in college football by the last couple of years of his tenure.

Midway through the 2018 season, Stoops was fired by former OU head coach Lincoln Riley after a 48-45 loss to Texas. Meanwhile, Venables was busy helping build a perennial title-contending defense with the Tigers, and he won two more national titles in Clemson. When Riley left after the 2021 season, the Sooners hired Venables as the program's new head coach.

Now, Oklahoma is set to see Stoops on the opposite sideline for each of the next four seasons, provided he stays with the Rebels for that long. Ole Miss is one of Oklahoma's three annual rivals for the next four years, meaning Stoops and Venables will once again be connected, over a quarter-century after they both arrived as co-DCs in Norman.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Aaron on X@Aaron_Gelvin.

This article originally appeared on Sooners Wire: Former Oklahoma DC hired by SEC program

Darryn Peterson Continues to Give Wizards, Kings & Pacers Reason to Fear Tanking For Him

Darryn Peterson Continues to Give Wizards, Kings & Pacers Reason to Fear Tanking For Him
Nathan Giese/Avalanche-Journal / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

While many believe Kansas star Darryn Peterson will be the No. 1 overall pick in June’s NBA Draft, he continues to give teams tanking to land him reason to be worried.

While the race to get playoff spots is a top story in the NBA right now, the battle to the bottom has gained even more attention of late. As many as eight teams are not hiding their goal of losing as many games as they can to improve the number of ping pong balls they will have at May’s NBA Lottery.

The reason why? What basketball experts believe is one of the best draft classes in a very long time. AJ Dybansta (BYU), Cameron Boozer (Duke), Caleb Wilson (North Carolina), and Peterson are all viewed as prospects with serious potential to be the face of an NBA franchise for the next decade. However, the Jayhawks star has garnered a lot of buzz as the player most likely to go No. 1 overall.

It’s understandable why, because when the 19-year-old is on the court, he looks phenomenal. However, staying on the floor consistently has been a problem for the freshman star. Of Kansas’ 26 games this season, Peterson has already missed 11 of them with various ailments, like ankle and hamstring issues, a consistent problem with cramping, and even a touch of the flu recently.

Is Darryn Peterson engaging in personal load management?

Looked like Bill was subbing Elmarko in for Tre White.

Then DP says something and the staff switches the sub. Elmarko for DP

pic.twitter.com/vifMWGCk1t

— Mike Vernon (@M_Vernon) February 19, 2026

At first, basketball fans thought it was just bad luck. However, this week, Darryn Peterson gave Kansas supporters reason to believe he may be doing his own version of load management.

During the Jayhawks’ win on Tuesday against Oklahoma State, Peterson was on a heater. Scoring 23 points in just 18 minutes. Then, after hitting a three on his first shot in the second half, he immediately turned to head coach Bill Self and asked to be taken out and never returned.

Kansas didn’t need him, and they still won going away by a score of 81-69. But his coach’s confusion about why he asked out has many wondering about Peterson’s dedication.

“It’s a concern. I thought we were past it, but obviously we’re not. It’s certainly a concern. You get into the NCAA Tournament, you’re playing a team just as good as you, and you need to have all your best players available,” Self said after the game. “All it takes is for one day like that to derail not only a game, but a season. Yeah, it’s concerning, but we’re making progress with it.”

There is a possibility that Darryn Peterson is trying to stay healthy for the NCAA Tournament after dealing with injuries all season. There is an even better chance he wants to avoid a serious injury before being the No. 1 pick in June. Which is his right to do, but it does bring up questions about his desire to be a great player and winner, night in and night out.

Teams like the Sacramento Kings, New Orleans Pelicans, Brooklyn Nets, Indiana Pacers, Washington Wizards, and Dallas Mavericks will all have a chance of landing the No. 1 pick in June. They will invest good money and resources into the hope that he can turn their franchises around. However, if he lacks the heart to be great even when he is not a 100% healthy, or has a business-first mentality as a teenager, they should wonder if he is willing to do everything necessary to improve their franchises.

Related Headlines

NBC Olympics schedule tonight: Spoiler-free primetime TV lineup for Thursday night Milan Cortina 2026 show

NBC

NBC Olympics schedule tonight: Spoiler-free primetime TV lineup for Thursday night Milan Cortina 2026 show originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The "Blade Angels" skate for a spot on the podium and Jordan Stolz looks for a third gold medal on NBC's "Primetime in Milan" show Thursday night. 

Every day of the Winter Games, The Sporting News will let you know what's coming on that night's primetime broadcasts — without spoilers — so you can plan your evening viewing if you can't watch all the action live. 

The final figure skating medals of these Winter Games will be awarded Thursday as the women's individual competition concludes. Alysa Liu of Team USA is in third after the short program, with Isabeau Levito eighth and Amber Glenn 13th. The free skate will determine who leaves Italy with a medal.

Elsewhere, Jordan Stolz will look to make it three golds from three events in the 1500m speed skating, where he has the fastest time in the world this season. 

Beyond NBC, fans can watch curling highlights on CNBC along with more curling, freestyle skiing and Nordic combined on USA Network. 

See below for the full broadcast schedule tonight and enjoy all the memorable moments from Milan Cortina. 

NBC Olympics schedule tonight: Spoiler-free primetime TV lineup for Thursday

Schedule is subject to change. Watch it all on NBC or stream it via DIRECTV.

Time (ET)Event
8 p.m.Figure skating women's free skate
8:45 p.m.Speed skating men's 1500m
9:30 p.m.Figure skating women's free skate
10:30 p.m.Freestyle skiing men's aerials

Olympics schedule tonight: USA, CNBC lineups for Thursday

Here are the events scheduled to be rebroadcast on delay this evening: 

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
5 p.m.Curling highlightsCNBC, DIRECTV
6:30 p.m.Nordic combined men's team large hillUSA, DIRECTV
7:30 p.m.Freestyle skiing men's & women's sprintsUSA, DIRECTV
8 p.m.Men's curling semifinal: Canada vs. NorwayUSA, DIRECTV
9:30 p.m.Women's curling: USA vs. SwitzerlandUSA, DIRECTV

Winter Olympics primetime TV channels, live stream

  • TV channels: NBC, USA, CNBC
  • Live stream: DIRECTV

Primetime in Milan will air live on NBC every night, with host Mike Tirico presenting a package of competition from earlier in the day, highlights and interviews. 

Primetime in Milan and the rest of the delayed broadcasts on USA Network and CNBC can be streamed live via DIRECTV, which offers a free trial so new subscribers can try before they buy. 

Catch Every Game – Try DIRECTV FREE Today! Stream live Soccer, MLB, and more with must-have sports channels like TNT, TBS, truTV, ESPN, FS1, and NFL Network—all included with DIRECTV.

Start your FREE trial now and never miss a moment of the action. No contracts, no hassle, just wall-to-wall sports and entertainment.

Winter Olympics live TV schedule for tomorrow

Friday, Feb. 20

Time (ET)SportEventTV/Live stream
4 a.m.Freestyle SkiingWomen's Ski Cross qualifyingUSA, Peacock
6 a.m.Freestyle SkiingWomen's Ski Cross finalsUSA, Peacock
8:05 a.m.CurlingWomen's Semifinal: USA vs. SwitzerlandPeacock
8:05 a.m.CurlingWomen's Semifinal: Canada vs. SwedenPeacock
8:15 a.m.BiathlonMen's 15km Mass StartUSA, Peacock
10:30 a.m.Speed SkatingWomen's 1500mPeacock, USA (11 a.m.)
12 p.m.BobsledTwo-Woman Run 1NBC, Peacock
1:05 p.m.CurlingMen's Bronze Medal GamePeacock
1:30 p.m.Freestyle SkiingMen's Halfpipe FinalNBC, Peacock
1:50 p.m.BobsledTwo-Woman Run 2Peacock
2:15 p.m.Short Track Speed SkatingWomen's 1500m, Men's RelayUSA, Peacock
3:10 p.m.HockeyMen's Semifinal: USA vs. SlovakiaNBC, Peacock

Related Links

Superspeedway Fuel Strategy Frustrates Drivers and Fans

nascar cup series daytona 500 duel 1 at daytona
Superspeedway Fuel Strategy Frustrates Drivers, FansSean Gardner - Getty Images

Attempting to control strategy in racing is like playing whack-a-mole. If a sanctioning body does something to stop one tactic, the teams simply find another one.

Let’s take a brief look at some tactics or strategies throughout NASCAR’s history.

  • Curtis Turner and Buck Baker drove their cars to their limit every lap. They either won or their car broke. Lee Petty used a different strategy. He didn’t abuse his equipment. Turner won 17 races, Baker visited victory lane 46 times and won two championships. Petty recorded 54 career victories and three NASCAR Cup championships.
  • Then the drivers discovered drafting and the slingshot maneuver at Daytona and Talladega. Cale Yarborough was a master at it and used it successfully on several occasions at Daytona.

  • David Pearson was a master at never showing his hand until late in a race, thus the nickname the “Silver Fox.” In the 1974 Firecracker 400 at Daytona, he snookered Richard Petty. Pearson was leading with Petty second when they took the white flag. Just past the trioval, Pearson backed off quickly and dropped to the inside as if his Wood Brothers Mercury had suddenly developed a problem. Petty shot past him. Pearson was nearly two seconds behind Petty, but he caught his rival’s Dodge in the fourth turn, dove to the inside and passed him for the victory. Petty was angry, calling Pearson’s strategy “risky and unnecessary.” Pearson didn’t think it was risky; he wanted Petty to think his car’s engine had blown.
david pearson and richard petty
Pearson snookered Petty at Daytona in 1974.RacingOne - Getty Images

The latest strategy drawing the fans’ ire involves fuel conservation at Daytona and Talladega. The teams have discovered they can gain an advantage on the track by limiting the amount of time they spend on pit road. Chase Elliott admitted it was neat when a few teams figured out the tactic, but then their competitors quickly caught on and adopted the same strategy.

In Sunday’s Daytona 500, Toyota drivers led three lines simultaneously and by doing so controlled the race’s pace, thus affecting other teams’ strategy. It was a tactic that angered many. NASCAR Cup Series Managing Director Brad Moran told “The Morning Drive” on SiriusXM NASCAR Radio that NASCAR was looking at ways to resolve the issue.

nascar cup series daytona 500 duel 2 at daytona
Kevin C. Cox - Getty Images

When drivers have been asked for solutions, their ideas have varied. They have ranged from adjusting the Stage lengths to increasing the size of the fuel tanks to giving the cars more horsepower. The latter won’t occur because of the insurance companies. Ever since Bobby Allison’s car flew into the catchfence at Talladega in May 1987 at more than 200 mph, insurance companies have cringed at the idea of stock cars traveling more than 200 mph. For those not familiar with Allison’s crash, it ripped away 100 to 150 feet of catchfence, and the flying debris injured several spectators. Had Allison’s car gone into the grandstand, that would have been the end of major league stock car racing.

Ryan Blaney offered possibly the best solution for stopping the superspeedways’ fuel conservation strategy: Make the cars more difficult to drive so there’s more tire wear. That way every time a person pits for fuel they need to change tires.

However, that doesn’t change the whack-a-mole effect.

“My job is to exploit whatever potential opportunity we have,” crew chief Alan Gustafson said. “This (fuel conservation) is it right now. It’ll change. Some way or another it’ll change.”

And when it does, the fuel conservation strategy will be a “remember when” topic in NASCAR history.

--END--

OM: Habib Beye unveils his playing philosophy

OM: Habib Beye unveils his playing philosophy
OM: Habib Beye unveils his playing philosophy

Habib Beye has outlined his plan with OM

OM: Habib Beye unveils his playing philosophy

During Thursday's press conference, Habib Beye presented his vision for OM's style of play, having just been appointed as head coach of the Marseille club.

On Wednesday night, Habib Beye was chosen to succeed Roberto De Zerbi as manager of Olympique de Marseille. Facing the media on Thursday, the new coach from the Phocaean city revealed his tactical blueprint for the current fourth-placed team in Ligue 1.

"When you have this kind of quality among your players and this group at your disposal, you have to aim to be a vertical team, one that plays dominant football. With these talented players, we need to be aware of that. It's a bit early to sell you a complete game plan, but here, people want to feel the excitement—they want to identify with the team. I believe that work has already been done. The job done previously was good—there have been positive and negative dynamics, but we must acknowledge what OM has achieved in recent years. You can't dismiss that: the football has been spectacular and of high quality. Of course, we always want consistency in results, but that's not for me to judge. Our football must reflect this city, this club, this stadium. Here, you’re held accountable by the fans, who are passionate about OM, about the club, about football. We need to embody that, to understand the identity and values of the club and the city. Maybe I have a head start on that, but the real test will be on the pitch," explained the Senegalese coach.

Al Ahly: What about Zizo and Trezeguet?

Al Ahly: What about Zizo and Trezeguet?
Al Ahly: What about Zizo and Trezeguet?

What about Zizo and Trezeguet?

Mahmoud Hassan dit Trezeguet/@Ahly

Egyptian football giants Al Ahly already have their sights set on the showdown against Espérance de Tunis in the CAF Champions League quarter-finals.

In this regard, the medical staff are doing everything possible to get their two stars, Ahmed Sayed known as Zizo and Mahmoud Hassan known as Trezeguet, back to full fitness after both suffered injuries.

The latest updates suggest that both internationals should be ready for action in the first leg against the Blood and Gold, scheduled for March 14 at the Hammadi Agrebi Stadium in Radès.

A massive boost for coach Jess Thorup, who will have all his key weapons available for this huge continental clash.

This season, Ahmed Sayed, known as Zizo, has featured in 18 matches, scoring 4 goals and providing 7 assists. Meanwhile, Mahmoud Hassan, known as Trezeguet, has netted 12 goals and delivered one assist in 22 appearances.

Dortmund Are Getting More From Maximilian Beier

DORTMUND, GERMANY - FEBRUARY 17: Maximilian Beier of Borussia Dortmund celebrates scoring his team's second goal during the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 League Knockout Play-off First Leg match between Borussia Dortmund and Atalanta BC at BVB Stadion Dortmund on February 17, 2026 in Dortmund, Germany. (Photo by Alex Grimm/Getty Images) | Getty Images

On November 10th, I published an article titled, Dortmund Need More From Maximilian Beier. In that article, I laid out a case that Maximilian Beier’s struggles were seriously hurting BVB’s season, being partially responsible for the club’s offensive struggles. Here’s what I wrote:

Last season, [Beier] got off to a very slow start but ultimately finished with a respectable eight goals and five assists in only around 1,500 minutes. He seemed to be on a decent upward trajectory, which makes his performances this season all the more underwhelming. He only has two goals and one assist in the league, despite playing almost 600 minutes

His two goals and one assist in his first 581 Bundesliga minutes amounted to 0.46 G+A/90. Since then, in 569 minutes, Beier has five goals and two assists, for 1.14 G+A/90. The reason for this is fairly simple: in my No Duharticle in December, I pointed out that Dortmund’s lack of offense, despite heavy presence in the opposition third and penalty box, comes down to a systemic lack of shot attempts, with Beier being a prime offender. However, since I published my first article in November, Beier’s shots/90 have essentially doubled from 1.54/90 to 3.00/90.

Niko Kovac seems to have recognized Beier’s uptick in form, with him getting the lion’s share of the starts in recent weeks over Karim Adeyemi, in addition to praising him in the media for his attitude and work ethic. If Borussia Dortmund are to continue their second half surge in search of success in the Bundesliga and the Champions League, then Maxi will need to continue this form until the end of the season.


Here’s a little P.S. gripe that doesn’t belong in the body of the article. In my article on Beier in November, I was able to break down a bunch of Maximilian Beier’s advanced metrics like progressive passes, take-ons, shot-creating actions, e.t.c. because that information was provided, at the time, by FBRef.com. Stats Perform, the parent company of Opta, a major supplier of commercial football analytics and the source of FBRef’s advanced analytics, rescinded the agreement to share their datawith FBRef on account of an alleged failure by FBRef to uphold their end of the agreement.

I’m not here to take a side and say that Opta is “wrong” and that FBRef is “right,” because I don’t know the terms of the agreement and what FBRef did or didn’t do to fail to uphold it, but the end result is that the best public source of advanced football analytics is now gone, and that is a major detriment to small outlets like us for whom a paid subscription to the data is simply not in the cards.

Charlotte Hornets share update after LaMelo Ball’s car crash

Charlotte Hornets’ star guard LaMelo Ball was involved in a car crash on Wednesday in Uptown Charlotte. The former No. 2 overall pick drove through an intersection when his camouflage-colored, custom-made Hummer collided with a gray Kia sedan before 5 p.m.

More: NBC could poach Unrivaled one-on-one idea for NBA All-Star Game

Police arrived at the scene shortly after. The NBA player wore a Hornets hoodie at the time. Ball got off the truck and into a Lamborghini to leave the place. Both vehicles suffered damage, with Ball’s car’s driver’s side getting ripped off after the collision. The Kia was damaged on the front end.

While no medical report was issued after the incident, many speculated about whether LaMelo Ball would be available to face the Houston Rockets on Thursday night. The Hornets’ injury report does not include Ball. Liam McNeeley (ankle sprain) and Coby White (calf strain) are out against Kevin Durant and Co.

https://twitter.com/HornetsPR/status/2024499213506109831

There was no information available on the person in the other car. Video showed that the driver got out of the car and walked towards Ball’s truck.

MORE: The most-watched NBA All-Star Games over the last 15 years, and where 2026 ranks

LaMelo Ball’s Hornets enter the second half of the season in remarkable form

After the All-Star break, the Charlotte Hornets will return to action on Thursday against a tough opponent. LaMelo Ball and Co., who have won 10 of their last 11 games, will take on the Houston Rockets, the fourth seed in the Western Conference.

Ball averages 19.3 points, 4.8 rebounds and 7.4 assists per game, shooting 40.1% from the field. The Hornets have heated up at the right time, and they could end the season stronger. At 26-29, they would play in the play-in tournament if the season ended today.

They can still put pressure on the No. 6 Philadelphia 76ers to avoid the mini tournament.

Enjoy free coverage of the top news & trending stories on The Big Lead

OLYMPICS: USA figure skater Isabeau Levito gushes over Olympic Village

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SPORTS MEDIA: College Hall of Famer, father of Chicago Bulls coach, dies

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The post Charlotte Hornets share update after LaMelo Ball’s car crash appeared first on The Big Lead.

Celtics converting John Tonje to standard 10-day contract contract

Michael Scotto: The Boston Celtics are converting rookie two-way guard John Tonje to a standard 10-day NBA deal, George Roussakis and Mark Bartelstein of Priority Sports told @hoopshype . Tonje, a former Wisconsin All-American, has been a standout with the Maine Celtics, Boston’s G League team.

x.com

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: Celtics converting John Tonje to standard 10-day contract contract

Jon Tonje, a drafted rookie the Celtics traded for, …

Yossi Gozlan: Jon Tonje, a drafted rookie the Celtics traded for, will count $58,817 less on their cap sheet than a veteran 10-day. It’s a small amount of savings that will allow them to go into the playoffs with two veterans and a rookie (likely Max Shulga) while staying under the tax.

x.com

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: Jon Tonje, a drafted rookie the Celtics traded for, …

“I thought it was really cool that people started …

The internet has a term for Cunningham’s particular style of ball, which does not include constant head jerks, flails, or palms-up gestures to the referee: He is an ethical hooper. Meaning he does not rely on, or actively search for, the almighty whistle. Allow Cunningham to reflect on the tao of ethical hooping: “I thought it was really cool that people started appreciating my game in that way. I’m like, man, I know I’m better than yada yada yada,” he says, not naming any names. (Jalen Brunson and Luka Dončić are a few of the NBA’s elite incessantly pleading to the officials.) “But I don’t get the same respect from the refs. I’m not getting the same foul calls. So people feel like this guy might be better than me, and he’s nowhere near better than me! Or like, I should have had 50 this game, or we should have won this game by 10, but we’re not getting the foul calls. I’m beating myself up over it. Then I start seeing people appreciate my game like, ‘Man, this guy’s so pure.’ People complimenting the purity of your game, I think it’s one of the best compliments I’ve ever got.”

GQ.com

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: “I thought it was really cool that people started …

“I probably won’t feel that way until I get a couple …

We sit in folding chairs alongside a now empty practice court where we have a direct sight line to the Bad Boys’ back-to-back championship banners from 1989 and 1990, as well as the 2004 squad’s, a team without a true alpha that took down Shaq and Kobe. Zeke’s, Rodman’s, and Rip’s retired jerseys hang on the wall, among a host of others. The team’s current headliner knows exactly what it will take for him to be added to that group. “I probably won’t feel that way until I get a couple rings, honestly,” he says. “I think that’s what it’ll take for me to feel like, ‘Man, this is my city.’ I don’t feel like the city should crown me that, because guys have won here.”

GQ.com

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: “I probably won’t feel that way until I get a couple …

2026 Fantasy baseball predictions for the biggest battles in MLB Spring Training

In the modern era, large, guaranteed contracts force teams to set most of their roster before Spring Training begins. But there are still some occasions where players wage an old-fashioned battle for a specific role, relying on their Spring Training performance to impress their coaching staff and the front office.

[Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Baseball league for the 2026 MLB season]

Here are several positions that will be hotly contested in Florida and Arizona this spring. Please note that I omitted closer competitions, as those battles could fill an entire article on their own.

Position Players

Baltimore Orioles RF: Dylan Beavers vs. Tyler O’Neill

Although Beavers wasn’t dominant in a late-season trial with the Orioles, he did just enough (.775 OPS) to be considered for an Opening Day lineup spot. The 24-year-old has a respectable mix of power and speed, and his premium plate patience is his main calling card. Meanwhile, O’Neill, one of baseball’s most inconsistent and injury-prone players, is coming off a disappointing season in which he logged three injured list stints and hit .199 in 54 games. But O’Neill still has two seasons remaining on a significant contract and is just one year removed from producing 31 homers and an .847 OPS in his lone season with the Red Sox.

Prediction: Money talks, which means that O’Neill will get a second chance to make a first impression with the Orioles. He will receive most of the early-season opportunities, with Beavers either working as a reserve player or returning to Triple-A to receive regular playing time. O’Neill is an excellent late-round dart throw in deep formats.

Tampa Bay Rays LF/RF: Chandler Simpson vs. Jake Fraley vs. Jonny DeLuca vs. Justyn-Henry Malloy vs. Jacob Melton

What a mess. The Rays grabbed Fraley off waivers in November, traded for Melton in December and purchased Malloy from the Tigers in January. Those three will throw their hats into the ring against DeLuca, who has a meager career .648 OPS, and Simpson, who could hit .300 and lead the majors in steals but has no power and is a subpar fielder.

Prediction: Simpson is the only draftable member of this group, and he will be overvalued unless he is working out of the leadoff spot. Melton will be the odd-man out, but by July, he will have returned from Triple-A and will earn more playing time than all the others in the second half. Keep an eye on Malloy in AL-only leagues, as the Rays will value his ability to draw walks.

Pittsburgh Pirates SS: Nick Gonzales vs. Konnor Griffin

The No. 1 prospect in most publications, Griffin is ready to join Paul Skenes as the future of the Pirates. Truthfully, there is no battle here – the Pirates simply need to decide if Griffin is ready to start his clock. His 2025 slash line (.333/.415/.527) says yes. His age (19) says no. Gonzales is merely an innocent bystander who will either play shortstop or work as a utilityman.

Prediction: Normally an extremely cautious organization (see: Bubba Chandler, 2025), the Pirates will get as wild as they can, and promote Griffin in May, a few weeks after he turns 20. I hope I’m wrong, but those who wisely stash this generational prospect will need to wait about six weeks before they reap the rewards.

Detroit Tigers SS: Kevin McGonigle vs. Zach McKinstry

A top-five overall prospect in virtually every publication, McGonigle has a career .922 OPS in the minors but has not reached Triple-A. He could skip that level and replace McKinstry, who is coming off his best season (.771 OPS) but has a lifetime .680 OPS and profiles more as a utility player.

Prediction: The Tigers open the season with McKinstry and give McGonigle one month in Triple-A before calling him up in May. The 21-year-old is worth stashing in most leagues.

New York Mets LF: Carson Benge vs. Tyrone Taylor

Mets fans are excited about Benge, as the 2024 first-round pick has emerged as the organization’s top prospect and is knocking on the door to debut. His main competition is Taylor, who is a capable fielder and has a respectable career .706 OPS. Brett Baty, who has not played the outfield in the majors but was pushed into a utility role over the winter, could also factor into the mix.

Prediction: Mets fans won’t like this one. Unless Benge becomes the biggest story of camp, he will open the season in Triple-A, with Taylor and Baty sharing left field. Benge will be one of the hottest waiver wire options when he debuts in May.

Cincinnati Reds 1B/LF: Sal Stewart vs. JJ Bleday vs. Spencer Steer

The addition of Eugenio Suárez tied up the DH spot, which leaves first base for either Stewart or Steer. If Stewart wins the job, Steer will either work as a utility player or claim left field at the expense of Bleday, who was released by the Athletics after struggling last season.

Prediction: After posting a .905 OPS across Double-A and Triple-A last season, Stewart has nothing left to prove in the minors. He will play first base, as the Reds need his powerful bat in the lineup. Steer and Bleday will share left field, but it won’t be a straight platoon split. Expect both players to earn about 350-400 at-bats, which will keep them on waivers in mixed leagues.

Rotation Battles

Boston Red Sox SP5: Johan Oviedo vs. Connelly Early vs. Payton Tolle

While the additions of Sonny Gray and Ranger Suárez grabbed the headlines, the Red Sox made a smaller trade to improve their rotation depth by adding Oviedo, who logged mixed results (3.57 ERA, 42:23 K:BB ratio) in nine starts after returning from Tommy John surgery. He will compete with Early and Tolle, who each had their moments in late-season auditions. Early fared so well that he was tabbed to start the deciding game of the Wild Card series against the Yankees last season.

Prediction: Oviedo has one minor-league option remaining, and the Red Sox will use it. Early has more upside and will get the final spot for an organization that is intent on challenging the Blue Jays and Yankees. Early is a viable final-round option in deep leagues.

Texas Rangers SP5: Jacob Latz vs. Kumar Rocker

Rocker was supposed to be a star by now. Unfortunately, injuries took a toll on him, and he has a lifetime 5.45 ERA over 17 starts. Latz was solid as a reliever last year and posted a 2.72 ERA over eight starts. Set to turn 30 shortly after Opening Day, he’s the fallback option if Rocker continues to struggle this spring.

Prediction: Rocker will show just enough during Spring Training to push Latz back to the bullpen. That being said, fantasy managers can leave the 26-year-old on waivers unless he thrives in April.

New York Mets SP 3/4/5: Sean Manaea vs. David Peterson vs. Kodei Senga vs. Clay Holmes vs. Jonah Tong

With five contenders for three rotation spots, the Mets are the envy of most teams. Manaea is coming off a dreadful season (5.64 ERA) but was excellent the previous year (3.47 ERA). Over 622.2 career innings, Peterson has used a heavy groundball lean to limit the damage (4.12 ERA) of allowing too many baserunners (1.37 WHIP). Holmes’ skill set mirrors that of Peterson, and his first season as a starter went well (3.53 ERA, 1.30 WHIP). Senga was effective overall last year (3.02 ERA) but fared so poorly in his final eight starts (6.56 ERA, 1.71 WHIP) that he spent September in the minors. One of baseball’s best pitching prospects, Tong had mixed results during five major league starts last season.

Prediction: The only member of this battle who still has options, Tong has no chance of making the rotation. He will return to the minors, and if everyone is healthy, the Mets will open 2026 with a six-man rotation. These things have a way of working themselves out, and the guess here is that one of the four 30-somethings will open the season on the IL.

Baltimore Orioles SP 4/5: Shane Baz vs. Zach Eflin vs. Dean Kremer

By signing Chris Bassitt, the Orioles created a logjam at the back of their rotation. Every pitcher in this battle has warts. Baz had a 4.87 ERA last season and is the only contender who has minor league options. Eflin made just 14 starts in 2025, making him the biggest injury risk of the group, but he didn’t get $10 million from the Orioles to work out of the bullpen. Kremer has the least upside but has made more than 20 starts while logging an ERA under 4.20 in each of the past four seasons. Tyler Wells is a dark horse in this race. The 31-year-old could make a case that he’s the best pitcher of the bunch (career 3.98 ERA, 1.03 WHIP), but he has options remaining, was limited by injury to seven starts over 2024-25 and has the smallest contract of the group.

Prediction: The Orioles paid too much for Baz to put him in the minors. If everyone is healthy at the end of Spring Training, Kremer will have to open the season as a bulk reliever. A six-man rotation is also on the table in Baltimore.

St. Louis Cardinals SP5: Kyle Leahy vs. Hunter Dobbins vs. Richard Fitts

One could argue that the three pitchers who will battle for the final rotation spot are more interesting than the four who already have their roles. Leahy will get his opportunity after thriving (3.07 ERA, 80:28 K:BB ratio) as a multi-inning reliever last year. He will compete against two hurlers who came from Boston in offseason trades. Both Dobbins and Fitts have shown glimpses of ability over roughly 60 career innings.

Prediction: Leahy will get his chance, with Dobbins and Fitts opening the season in Triple-A. None of these three pitchers is worth drafting, but they can all be monitored early in the season.

Detroit Tigers Unveil 2 Alternate Uniforms for 2026

The Detroit Tigers officially added a fresh splash of color to their wardrobe on Wednesday, unveiling new orange and navy alternate uniforms that will debut during the 2026 season.

The designs blend modern creativity with franchise history, drawing inspiration from the iconic 1984 Tigers while leaning harder than ever into the color orange — something fans have been asking for years.

Detroit Tigers Corey Julks Detroit Tigers Pitching Rotation Detroit Tigers Alternate Uniform

A Look at the New Alternates

The Tigers will rotate the new uniforms into their schedule throughout the season:

  • Orange jerseys will be worn during select home games
  • Navy jerseys will be featured in select road games
  • Both looks will also appear during spring training, starting immediately

Detroit will continue wearing its popular City Connect uniforms at times, but the new alternates give the club another distinct look that still feels unmistakably Tigers.

Detroit Tigers unveil two new alternate uniformshttps://t.co/UKEWj2IRZXpic.twitter.com/EBhT3LXKb0

— Cody Stavenhagen (@CodyStavenhagen) February 19, 2026

Fans Helped Shape the Final Design

According to the organization, these uniforms weren’t rushed.

The Tigers spent 18 months researching and developing the alternates, gathering feedback from:

  • Fan focus groups
  • Players inside the clubhouse
  • Front office leadership

That process produced hundreds of design concepts before narrowing things down to what fans see today.

Ryan Gustafson, President and CEO of Ilitch Sports + Entertainment, emphasized that collaboration was the driving force behind the final product.

“We’re proud to introduce these new uniforms, which have been years in the making,” Gustafson said. “We believe it’s important to ask fans what matters to them.”

Gustafson noted that fans consistently asked for:

  • More creativity in merchandise
  • Additional alternate jerseys
  • Greater use of orange
  • Subtle throwbacks to the 1984 championship era

A Balance of Tradition and Modern Style

While the colors are bold, the Tigers stayed grounded in tradition.

Both alternate uniforms prominently feature:

  • The Olde English ‘D’
  • The classic script Detroit lettering

The result is a look that feels new without straying from the franchise’s visual identity.

“What you see today is a result of nearly everyone being drawn to the alignment between our existing uniforms and new alternates,” Gustafson said.

When and Where Fans Can Buy Them

Fans won’t have to wait long to get their hands on the new gear:

  • In-store: Available Friday at the D Shop in Detroit and Lakeland
  • Online: Available starting Sunday
  • Additional merchandise featuring the new color schemes will roll out closer to Opening Day

Between the orange home look and the navy road version, the Tigers are giving fans more ways than ever to rep the team in 2026.

The post Detroit Tigers Unveil 2 Alternate Uniforms for 2026 appeared first on Detroit Sports Nation.

Shivam Dube emerges as India's silent power-hitter in T20 World Cup

Ahmedabad: For someone who would get picked for team India only if Hardik Pandya got injured and who even was struggling to find a place in the Mumbai team for one season, Shivam Dube has come a long way.

His ability to tonk the spinners for big sixes earned him a recall for the 2024 T20 World Cup, with the selectors preferring him over well-known finisher Rinku Singh.


In the 2026 T20 World Cup, the Mumbai and Chennai Super Kings allrounder is turning out to be a 'silent' (not in the limelight), but violent (highly explosive) hero for India.

In a tournament where India's top order has largely struggled to get going against spinners, Dube's impactful presence and contributions are worth their weight in gold.

On Wednesday night at the Narendra Modi Stadium, Dube enhanced his credentials as a premier power-hitter in world cricket with a match-winning knock of 66 off just 31 balls, which included half a dozen powerfully struck sixes, against the Netherlands in India's last league stage match of the T20 World Cup.

Unlike the modern T20 specialist batter, Dube doesn't look to improvise much. Standing still at the crease, the Mumbaikar employs his long levers, timing, and raw power to give the ball a good whack if it is pitched in his arc.

Coming into this game, the 32-year-old had produced crucial cameos of 23 (off 16 balls) and 27 (off 17 balls) against Namibia and Pakistan in his previous two outings in the 2026 T20 World Cup. In the build-up to the T20 World Cup, Dube had hammered 65 off 23 balls against New Zealand in the fourth T20I at Vizag last month.

On Wednesday, Dube took time to get his eye in and was slightly fortunate to survive a close lbw appeal, which was reviewed by the Dutch, off off-spinner Aryan Dutt. He scored just six off 11 balls before exploding in typical fashion.

"It was a little tough on the wicket, but this is the situation I love to bat and I was enjoying it, although I was under pressure for some time. The offspinner [Colin Ackermann] bowled really well to me and four dot balls, a good over from my side, but I knew that I'm going to cover up later. [Some balls] were skidding as well as keeping low. One of the balls spun as well. So, for me, it was like, yes, I can hit him, but at that time the situation demanded something else. So, I had to play at that time," Dube said at the post-match press conference on Wednesday.

Since he knows he has the ability to unleash big sixes, Dube doesn't get fazed by a few dot balls while starting off. "Yes, obviously when you play dot balls in T20, you feel pressure. But as a player, as a batsman, I know at that time that maybe right now if I am at 2 runs in 10 balls, in the next 5 balls, if I hit two sixes, it will be covered. So that thought always stays in my mind. Yes, the wicket was gone so it is important that we build partnerships, so for that even if 2-4 balls are dot balls it is fine, but later it gets covered," said Dube, radiating a smile after bagging the Player of the Match award.

A few years back, Dube carried an unwanted reputation of being someone who would be uncomfortable against the short ball and genuine pace. However, over time, the left-hander worked on improving his weakness, turning into a better player each year. On Wednesday, he smashed three sixes off Dutch pacer Logan van Beek. Quizzed about how he climbed the learning curve and removed his drawbacks, Dube said, "When you play in those situations, you learn. So, I have become a little smart in that situation. I know, yes, this bowler can come to me on this ball, or a fast bowler can bowl short or slower balls – I've worked on those things. And now I'm getting better. Game awareness is important and it has gotten better from my side," Dube said.

"When I [first] came to CSK [Chennai Super Kings], there was something I was struggling with. It was important to come back strong, because I know I can dominate. I worked really hard on the short ball. I knew it's not going to be easy [to make the changes], but I had to give it extra time and play extra balls. That's what I did."

"I know all the bowlers, they're going to [try and] block me as well," Dube said. "They'll not bowl me yorkers or length balls. They're going to come short. They're going to bowl me slower balls. So I prepared myself, so I was waiting for that. When I came today, it was not that I can take the strike rate high [immediately], but at some time there was something I thought, this is the time I can go now. I knew today was my day."

Until the 2024 T20 World Cup, Dube's strike rate against pace in T20Is was 134, but now it's gone up to 172. Aware that pacers are going to aim to give him some 'chin music', Dube is ready for the challenge.

"I know all the bowlers, they're going to [try and] block me as well," Dube said. "They'll not bowl me yorkers or length balls. They're going to come short. They're going to bowl me slower balls. So I prepared myself, so I was waiting for that. When I came today, it was not that I can take the strike rate high [immediately], but at some time there was something I thought, this is the time I can go now. I knew today was my day," Dube said.

Beaming when told that this was his maiden T20 World Cup fifty, Dube chose to bat for some of his hyped-up teammates as well. "It's about who has the day," Dube said, striking a philosophical tone. "I think in our team all of us are match-winners, anyone can hit big sixes on any day, and I felt today is the day, so I need to be a little smart, push myself, stay till the end, but I also need to regain my strength as well. That's what I did. That's why I'm a power hitter," Dube said.

Besides his batting, Dube's bowling – thanks to many useful sessions with bowling coach and former South African pacer Morne Morkel – has also improved significantly. After his heroics with the bat, he took two for 35 in three overs on Wednesday night. Reflecting the team's confidence in his seam bowling, skipper Suryakumar Yadav turned to Dube when the Netherlands needed 28 in the final over. The Dutch got 10, and Dube took a wicket.

Chicago Bears release statement as Indiana committee passes Hammond stadium bill

The Chicago Bears have released a new statement on a potential new stadium as Indiana lawmakers moved forward with a bill to bring the team to Hammond.

The Bears said in a statement, "The passage of SB 27 would mark the most meaningful step forward in our stadium planning efforts to date. We are committed to finishing the remaining site-specific necessary due diligence to support our vision to build a world-class stadium near the Wolf Lake area in Hammond, Indiana. We appreciate the leadership shown by Governor Braun, Speaker Huston, Senator Mishler and members of the Indiana General Assembly in establishing this critical framework and path forward to deliver a premier venue for all of Chicagoland and a destination for Bears fans and visitors from across the globe. We value our partnership and look forward to continuing to build our working relationship together."

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Thursday morning legislators voted unanimously to push a bill out of the Ways and Means Committee. The bill would create the Northwest Indiana Stadium authority similar to Illinois Sports Facilities Authority. This could convince the Chicago Bears to cross state line and build a new stadium.

Lawmakers said the Bears would pay $2 billion toward construction costs.

The proposal includes new food, beverage, and innkeepers taxes in Indiana's northwest counties to help pay for the stadium and infrastructure.

Among the people who spoke during Thursday's hearing include Hammond's Mayor Thomas McDermott Jr and the Indiana Speaker of the House Rep. Todd Huston.

"Hammond is ready to partner with the Chicago Bears, basically Hammond would do whatever it takes to help make this project a success," Mayor McDermott Jr. said. "Hammond is uniquely positions for this moment, we are part of the Chicagoland region."

The Hammond mayor spoke Thursday after an Indiana Bears stadium bill passed.

"We've had excellent conversations with the Chicago Bears and we are forging a relationship that would be a foundation for a public/private partnership leaned on construction of a world class stadium," Speaker Huston said.

Indiana Governor Mike Braun said in a statement, ""Indiana is open for business, and our pro-growth environment continues to attract major opportunities like this partnership with the Chicago Bears. We've identified a promising site near Wolf Lake in Hammond and established a broad framework for negotiating a final deal. The amendment to Senate Bill 27 puts forward the essential framework to complete this agreement, contingent upon site due diligence proceeding smoothly."

Governor JB Pritzker, speaking Thursday, said he was disappointed by the Bears statement.

Illinois Governor JB Pritzker said he was "surprised" after the Chicago Bears' signaled a shift to build a stadium in Indiana.

"It was a surprise to us," Governor Pritzker said. "The Bears actually, yesterday, we completed more than three hours, my team did, of discussions with the Bears, very positive discussions and mostly agreed on a bill that would move forward this morning, but they asked us not to move forward with it this morning because they said they wanted to tweak a couple of items in the bill that were things that we were working on them and so to have a statement put out by the Bears...Now they saying to us that that statement is not some confirmation that they are moving to Indiana but rather that Indiana had asked them to say that they are going to move forward with the negotiations in Indiana, but I have to say it is very disappointing to hear that they would put that statement out but not saying about the advancement that has been made in Illinois. We are waiting to hear from the Bears what they would like to do next."

Pritzker and his staff, and lawmakers have been meeting with Bears brass behind closed doors.

The news out of Indiana came as an Illinois House committee that could have brought the Bears a step closer to a new stadium in Illinois was canceled.

The House Revenue and Finance Committee canceled a meeting Wednesday to hear the "Mega Project" bill.

No date has been set on a new hearing.

SEE ALSO | Talks of Bears moving to suburbs progressing, Pritzker says, amid attempts to lure team to Indiana

The bill could give the Bears a long-term property tax break for their proposed stadium in Arlington Heights.

WATCH: Gov. Pritzker says Bears statements on Indiana stadium 'was a surprise'

Gary Mayor Eddie Melton released a statement saying, "Today's announcement that the State of Indiana has selected Hammond for the new Bears stadium marks a major shift for our region. While Gary presented a compelling case, the State's decision now sets the stage for a new chapter in Northwest Indiana.

"While I would be less than honest if I said there isn't some level of disappointment, I am encouraged to see meaningful progress in this process. Major decisions like this require movement, clarity, and commitment - and today represents a step forward for Northwest Indiana.

"My primary concern remains ensuring that previously committed funding, particularly the innkeeper's tax revenue designated for the operations of the Lake County Convention Center in Gary, is protected and honored. We must safeguard investments that support our long-term growth and stability.

"Regional success benefits us all. Should this project move forward following the Bears due diligence exorts in Hammond, I will join leaders from across the state in welcoming the Bears to Northwest Indiana. A development of this magnitude creates a rising tide for the entire region. Gary is uniquely positioned to amplify this economic momentum-serving as the western gateway to the Indiana Dunes National Park, served by three major interstate corridors and an international airport.

"Gary's progress does not depend on one opportunity. Gary's comeback is real, it is measurable, and its momentum continues.

"Hammond, don't fumble, we're ready to recover."

Crosby’s injury re-opens debate on NHL participation in Olympics

MILAN, ITALY - FEBRUARY 18: Sidney Crosby #87 of Canada is leaving to the locker room during the Men's Playoffs Quarterfinal match between Canada and Czechia on day twelve of the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena on February 18, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by RvS.Media/Robert Hradil/Getty Images) | Getty Images

You could almost feel the rush start building up as soon as Sidney Crosby limped off the ice yesterday. Other players like Kevin Fiala (out for the season with a broken leg), Josh Morrissey (currently injured to an unknown degree) and Brad Marchand (who missed two Olympic games but has since returned) have picked up injuries in these Olympics, but a player on the level of Crosby raises the discourse to new levels.

It harkens back to the 2014 Olympics, when then-New York Islander star John Tavares was lost for the season with a torn MCL suffered in Sochi.

First, the latest updates on Crosby have been inconclusive at best. Crosby has not been ruled out by Canadian coach Jon Cooper for Friday’s semifinal game yet, however he obviously has picked up some level of injury that has his immediate future in doubt. Even if Crosby can return for the games, his status for a stretch of 12 games in 21 days for the Penguins, which begins in just a week, has to be at least partially in doubt.

It probably won’t be as severe as “Mario Lemieux only playing one NHL game after the 2002 Olympics” but then again the situations were drastically different with Lemieux back then clearly trying to hold onto as much of his health as possible to participate in the Olympics and then be forced to address his health in the aftermath. (Lemieux would go onto play only 10 games the following season). That was less the fault of an Olympic injury and more a different priority in a different time with a much different health situation.

Going back to 2014 and the endless debate, former NYI general manager Garth Snow didn’t take the news well on losing his best player, as one would expect. Snow called NHL participation in the Olympics a “joke” and said:

“This is probably the biggest reason why NHL players shouldn’t be in the Olympics, it should just be amateurs,” Snow told Newsday. “And it could have happened to anyone; it just happened to be us that lost our best player.”

“A lot of people pay to see John play,” he said. “It wouldn’t matter if we were 10 points clear of a playoff spot or 10 points out. We lost our best player and he wasn’t even [injured while] playing for us.”

Snow asked rhetorically if the IIHF and IOC would reimburse the Islander season-ticket holders who were out a lot of money. Ticket prices have risen significantly in the last 12 years, the same thought holds water for those Penguin fans who have invested hundreds or thousands of dollars in the 10 home games Pittsburgh will play through the end of March. That total investment will reach eight-figures with no small amount of the decision linked to the opportunity to see Crosby play.

On the flip side, Penguin coaches and teammates surely understand and accept the risk involved.

“It’s the Olympics,” coach Dan Muse said after a Penguins practice yesterday. “Anytime these guys get an opportunity to represent their countries, I’m just happy for them. To play in a tournament like that, to be playing in that setting, that is something I think everybody dreams of. The only thing for me is that I’m excited for those guys getting that opportunity that they’ve earned.”

Crosby’s teammate Bryan Rust encapsulated the overwhelming majority of player opinions by responding to the early news that Crosby got hurt and whether the risk justified the desire to still compete.

“You can get injured in practice, look at (Aleksander) Barkov, he (is missing) the year because he got injured in practice. (Kevin Hayes) got injured in practice. Things can happen all sorts of places. With the way these practices are now, with how intense they are, guys across the league, somebody might get injured.

“I don’t think guys in this league are too worried about that. The opportunity to represent your country at the highest level, the world stage, I think guys are more than willing to accept that risk.”

That rings true in a lot of senses. We can’t speak for injured players like Crosby, Fiala and Morrisey but it stands to reason all would get right back on the plane to Italy to represent their countries again, even knowing firsthand the price that could be attached in terms of pain that might entail.

The question becomes weighing player interest against what is best for the NHL season. Ancillary debates spawn from there about the impact of taking a three week pause and condensing a season into a reduced calendar is another element that impacts the league and the players who don’t get Olympic participation, held up against a notion about growing the appeal of the game (of which, results can be spotty for tangible impact of best-on-best drawing into increased NHL audience).

The debate draws down to competing opinions and viewpoints that will never align. Those with an NHL bent, be it for professional or monetary reasons, as Snow illustrated will justifiably be angry when the inevitable happens for star players getting hurt at the Olympics. Others, like the players themselves as Rust spoke to, are more than willing to risk it for the glory involved and opportunity to represent their country. There are decent enough reasons to be on either side of the fence, depending on where a perspective falls.

It’s a debate that will rage on for as long as the NHL and the Olympics both exist, neither of which are going away anytime soon. NHL players have been confirmed to compete in the 2030 Olympics, and the league is increasing their own involvement in staging best-on-best action in 2028. The questions about whether the cost is worth the benefit won’t change for people who run NHL teams compared to those that want to represent their countries, which will only lead to more instances of the topic coming back for further discussion as time goes on.

NBA Tank Score: A tanktastic power ranking of tanking teams

Tanking has begun. Forget April nosedives. That was a 2010s thing. March? That was so last year. The NBA’s annual tanking ritual, in all its spirited glory, is now taking place as early as February. Yes, before the All-Star break.

Last week, the NBA fined the Utah Jazz $500,000 for tanking and hit the Indiana Pacers with a $100,000 fine for their own unsavory efforts. In the press release, Adam Silver vowed: “Overt behavior like this that prioritizes draft position over winning undermines the foundation of NBA competition and we will respond accordingly to any further actions that compromise the integrity of our games. Additionally, we are working with our Competition Committee and Board of Governors to implement further measures to root out this type of conduct.”

Silver sounded the alarm in his annual All-Star press conference over the weekend, saying tanking is as bad as he’s seen it. The teams have been put on notice.

We’ll see how they react. To figure out why the Utah Jazz were resting star players Lauri Markkanen and Jaren Jackson Jr. in fourth quarters already, it’s important to understand that this year presents the perfect storm of tanking. 

(Amy Monks/Yahoo Sports Illustration)
(Amy Monks/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

There are three primary reasons why it’s become the topic du jour, and Silver’s fiery comments will do little to change the following realities:

For one, it’s a frothy draft class with Cam Boozer (my favorite prospect), AJ Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson, Caleb Wilson and others making NBA executives weak in the knees. There was only one Wemby in his draft class. It was seen as a “Cooper Flagg and then everybody else” kind of class last year. This time around, there might be several prospects whom front office people could view as The One. Thus, getting a top-4 pick is akin to having the No. 1 pick in any given year — except with the low-key sweetener that you can sign that player to a cheaper rookie scale contract than that of the No. 1 guy.

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Secondly, the NBA’s decision to flatten the draft lottery odds beginning in 2019 has backfired. Evidently, it has not stopped the losers’ race to the bottom; the league just opened up the race to more standings plungers. Now, a team on the fringe of the playoff race could realistically have a chance at a top-4 pick, which before was nothing more than a statistical hail mary. Before 2019, in the previous era, the No. 10 team in the draft lottery would have a measly 4% chance at a top-4 pick, but those odds more than tripled to as much as 14% in the new model. Furthermore, the odds of actually winning the lottery, in the No. 10 slot, also tripled from 1.1% to 3%.

Third, that nasty cognitive trick … good ol’ recency bias. A 3% chance at winning anything might seem on paper like a foolish pipe dream — until it happens. And happens again. The last two draft lotteries were won by teams in the No. 10 (2024) and No. 11 (2025) draft slots. A GM trying to convince an owner of a fringe play-in team that it’s in the franchise’s best interest to lose games may not have been particularly persuasive in prior years.  But then the Atlanta Hawks soared from No. 10 to land the No. 1 overall pick. And then the real kicker: the 11-seeded Dallas Mavericks got Flagg.

Put it all together and we could have as many as 11 teams, over a third of the NBA, who are either already awful or outright trying to lose — and oftentimes both. More could join the party soon. So which team will be the Top Tanker? Let’s rank them based on five categories in a five-point system with a 5 being the strongest tanking power. (I’m weighting the “Draft Incentive” factor 10 points due to its huge influence on the proceedings.)

  • Draft Incentive. Do they have their first-round draft pick this year? Is it protected, and by how much? Do they have urgency to tank this season because of draft-pick debt in the future? 

  • Tanking Track Record. Are they showing symptoms of tankitis now? Does this front office have a history of tanking behavior or is it new to this party? Has its coach shown a tank-friendly willingness to “develop young players” at the cost of winning in the past?

  • Bill of Health. Are there players who have existing injuries or an injury-riddled past that can be weaponized in the tank? Are players already being ruled out with cryptic injuries?

  • Youth Movement. Is the roster filled with rookies and youngsters who can fulfill a sudden “development” phase? Or is it a veteran-laden team with players who may object to any DNP-Rest strategies? 

  • Tankerrific Roster. Do they have any winning players? Do they have any All-Stars that can hurt their quest? Is this a glorified G League team? 

Got it? Without further ado, let’s get to the tank scores … 


11. New Orleans Pelicans

  • Record: 15-41 (No. 3 in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Dejounte Murray (Achilles); Trey Murphy III (shoulder; day-to-day)

Tank Score: 15 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

0 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

3 out of 5

Bill of Health:

4 out of 5

Youth Movement:

4 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

4 out of 5

They’re here because they’re horrible, not because they’re horrible onpurpose. The Pelicans are losing their first-round pick no matter what happens, either to their likeliest destination of Atlanta or to Milwaukee. Against all odds, Williamson has played in 30 straight games, which is commendable. If he shows any sign of gimpiness, I’d expect them to shut him down to preserve one of their core pieces in trade talks or, you know, the franchise’s future. 


10. Charlotte Hornets

  • Record: 26-29 (12th in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Coby White (calf)

Tank Score: 19 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

6 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

4 out of 5

Bill of Health:

3 out of 5

Youth Movement:

4 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

2 out of 5

A glorious recent nine-game win streak may say otherwise, but then again the Clippers were ripping through the NBA before they quickly shifted gears and traded James Harden and Ivica Zubac. The Hornets are a Kon Knueppel injury away from having some serious organizational deliberations about the upcoming draft odds. Even still they can only move up so far in the lotto standings if they pull the plug. As of now, the Hornets are too good to tank. Emphasis on as of now. 


9. Milwaukee Bucks

  • Record: 23-30 (9th in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Giannis Antetokounmpo (calf); Myles Turner (calf); Ryan Rollins (foot)

Tank Score: 20 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

8 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

2 out of 5

Bill of Health:

5 out of 5

Youth Movement:

3 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

2 out of 5

To tank or not to tank, that is the question. Giannis’ status can swing this wide open. The Roster Quality factor goes to 5 if he’s out, but I have to be somewhat measured here about their tank potential. 

It’s a common misconception that the Bucks aren’t incentivized to tank. Yes, they don’t “control” their first-round pick as they will receive the least favorable of their pick and New Orleans’ (the most favorable of those two reroutes to Atlanta). Luckily for Milwaukee, the Pelicans are dreadful, so Milwaukee has a good chance of actually benefiting from its own tankjob. The Bucks can pick as high as No. 2 in this year’s draft, but if they win the draft lottery, it automatically goes to Atlanta. Everyone around the league is watching the saga that is Cream City. 


8. Indiana Pacers

  • Record: 15-40 (4th in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Tyrese Haliburton (Achilles; out for season); Ivica Zubac (ankle); Obi Toppin (foot); Johnny Furphy (ACL; out for season)

Tank Score: 21 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

10 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

3 out of 5

Bill of Health:

4 out of 5

Youth Movement:

2 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

2 out of 5

They must really love Ivica Zubac. The Pacers are sending their first-round pick to Hollywood if it lands anywhere from No. 5 to No. 9 on draft lotto night. Given the flattened lottery odds, Indiana can’t guarantee it keeps it, but it can certainly tilt the scales by losing a ton. We’ll see how much it’s been deterred by the Commissioner’s slap on the wrist. 


7. Chicago Bulls

  • Record: 24-31 (10th in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Josh Giddey (hamstring); Noa Essengue (shoulder; out for season); Isaac Okoro (knee); Jalen Smith (calf); Tre Jones (hamstring)

Tank Score: 23 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

10 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

1 out of 5

Bill of Health:

4 out of 5

Youth Movement:

5 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

3 out of 5

That sound you hear is the sigh of relief from Chicago fans who have been begging for this downward direction. After holding a midseason firesale for Nikola Vučević, Ayo Dosunmu and Coby White, the Bulls are finally picking ping-pong balls over purgatory. The delayed tank may not have been timely for maximizing this year’s pick, but hey, better late than never.


6. Sacramento Kings

  • Record: 12-44 (No. 1 in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Zach LaVine (finger; out for season); Domantas Sabonis (knee; out for season); Keegan Murray (ankle)

Tank Score: 25 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

9 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

4 out of 5

Bill of Health:

4 out of 5

Youth Movement:

3 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

5 out of 5

Are they tanking or are they just epically bad? Who knows. The team announced that both Zach LaVine and Domantas Sabonis will miss the remainder of the season with injuries which will certainly help efforts to be the Kings of the Tank. The presence of DeMar DeRozan and Russell Westbrook could interfere with their nosedive, but it hasn’t really slowed down their unrelenting march to No. 1 on the reverse standings.


5. Memphis Grizzlies

  • Record: 20-33 (8th in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Ja Morant (elbow); Zach Edey (ankle); Brandon Clarke (calf); Santi Aldama (knee); Walter Clayton Jr. (knee)

Tank Score: 26 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

9 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

3 out of 5

Bill of Health:

5 out of 5

Youth Movement:

5 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

4 out of 5

Bluff City ain’t bluffing when it comes to their intentions. The Grizzlies stunned league insiders by trading Jaren Jackson Jr. to Utah for draft picks, signaling the Grizzlies are going for ping-pong balls, not the play-in. The Grizzlies have a ton of future draft capital so they don’t need to tank this season, but the small-market team can add top-shelf talent if it plays its cards right.


4. Dallas Mavericks

  • Record: 19-35 (7th in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Cooper Flagg (foot); Kyrie Irving (out for season; ACL); Dereck Lively (out for season; foot); Caleb Martin (ankle); Daniel Gafford (ankle); Naji Marshall (foot)

Tank Score: 27 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

10 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

5 out of 5

Bill of Health:

5 out of 5

Youth Movement:

4 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

3 out of 5

Mark Cuban says embrace the tank, so who are we to argue? Normally, a sighting of Cooper Flagg in a walking boot would be a nightmare scenario for the Mavericks. But in a world in which Dallas wins by losing, news of Flagg’s gimpy foot will likely help its tanking efforts. Because the Mavericks don’t control their first-round pick until 2031 after this, they receive a maximum tanking incentive score for this season.


3. Brooklyn Nets

  • Record: 15-38 (5th in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Nic Claxton (hip); Noah Clowney (ankle); Michael Porter Jr. (knee)

Tank Score: 27 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

9 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

5 out of 5

Bill of Health:

4 out of 5

Youth Movement:

5 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

4 out of 5

There’s urgency here even though they don’t have any protections on the pick like Utah and Washington do. Brooklyn owes Houston swap rights on their 2027 first-round pick as a result of the 2020 James Harden trade. Brooklyn’s time to add a face of the franchise through the draft is now. Michael Porter Jr. remains one of the best players in the tank field, but his iffy medical history suggests that Brooklyn will be ultra conservative when it comes to allowing him to play through any sort of ailments. 


2. Utah Jazz

  • Record: 18-38 (6th in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Jaren Jackson Jr. (knee; out for season); Keyonte George (ankle); Walker Kessler (shoulder; out for season)

Tank Score: 29 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

10 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

5 out of 5

Bill of Health:

5 out of 5

Youth Movement:

5 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

4 out of 5

Adam Silver dropped the hammer on the Jazz for a reason (beyond, of course, their guilt): they have the most to gain by tanking. Not only do they have to secure a top-8 protected pick, but BYU standout AJ Dybantsa is in this draft. If the pick falls outside the top-8 on lotto night, it goes to OKC. With Jaren Jackson Jr. out for the rest of the season following a knee procedure, the tank path is a lot clearer now. The uncertain future of star Lauri Markkanen in light of the $500K fine is the only reason why this isn’t a perfect 30 out of 30 score.


1. Washington Wizards

  • Record: 13-39 (No. 2 in draft lottery)

  • Injuries of note: Trae Young (knee); Anthony Davis (hand); Alex Sarr (hamstring); Cam Whitmore (shoulder; out for season)

Tank Score: 30 out of 30

Draft Incentive:

10 out of 10

Tanking Track Record:

5 out of 5

Bill of Health:

5 out of 5

Youth Movement:

5 out of 5

Tankerrific Roster:

5 out of 5

Behold, the Washington (Tank) Commanders. Oh, you thought Trae Young was going to play anytime soon? The Wizards thought otherwise, announcing at the time of the trade that he’s out indefinitely with a knee issue. And now star newcomer Anthony Davis may be potentially sidelined for the rest of the season with a tricky hand issue. 

In related news; the Wizards lose their pick to New York if it doesn’t fall in the top eight! With that in mind, they’re sending loud signals that they’re fully committed to the tank. Beyond Trae and AD being put on ice, the Wizards have quietly sat their best players down the stretch in multiple games this season, somehow skirting any penalty from the league. Let’s see if they tempt fate again. 

Celtics adding Dalano Banton

Michael Scotto: The Boston Celtics plan to sign Dalano Banton to a 10-day deal, sources told @hoopshypeofficial.bsky.social. Banton just completed a 10-day deal with the Clippers. The 26-year-old guard has averaged 6.7 points in 14.5 minutes in five seasons combined with the Raptors, Celtics, Blazers, and Clippers.

bsky.app

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: Celtics adding Dalano Banton

Kessler Edwards has officially joined Hapoel IBI Tel …

Confirming recent reports, Kessler Edwards has officially joined Hapoel IBI Tel Aviv as of Thursday. The 25-year-old forward signed a contract for the remainder of the 2025-26 season, bolstering the squad just before the EuroLeague registration deadline.

EuroHoops.net

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: Kessler Edwards has officially joined Hapoel IBI Tel …

Rich Paul: 'Anthony Edwards is the best player in our league today'

As the NBA enters a new era, the next generation of players has already announced its arrival. While players like Victor Wembanyama have been rated among the best players in the league, Rich Paul suggested that Anthony Edwards may be more deserving of it. During a recent episode of the “Game Over” podcast, Rich Paul made a bold statement by claiming that Minnesota Timberwolves superstar Anthony Edwards was currently the best player in the NBA. He justified his case by stating: “I still think it’s a community, but I believe that community is led by Anthony Edwards. Anthony Edwards is the best player in our league today.”

Fade Away World

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: Rich Paul: 'Anthony Edwards is the best player in our league today'

The jersey worn by Dallas Mavericks rookie Cooper …

The jersey worn by Dallas Mavericks rookie Cooper Flagg in the first half of his NBA debut was sold privately by Sotheby's for $1 million, a record for a Flagg collectible and a record for a jersey sold through NBA Auctions. Flagg had 10 points and 10 rebounds in his first regular-season game, a 125-92 loss to the San Antonio Spurs on Oct. 22. This season, Flagg has become the NBA's youngest player to score 40 points in a game and owns the single-game record for points scored by a teenager (49).

ESPN

This article originally appeared on Hoops Hype: The jersey worn by Dallas Mavericks rookie Cooper …

Detroit Tigers reveal new orange, navy alternate uniforms

LAKELAND, FL – The Detroit Tigers have unveiled orange and navy alternate uniforms.

The Tigers introduced the two new uniforms on Thursday, Feb. 19, adding those combinations to their on-field rotation in the 2026 season. The orange jersey features the Old English "D" on the left side of the chest with white pants, while the navy jersey features the "Detroit" script across the chest with gray pants.

The orange jersey will be worn for select home games, and the navy jersey will be worn for select road games.

"We're proud to introduce these new uniforms, which have been years in the making," said Ryan Gustafson, president and CEO of Ilitch Sports + Entertainment, in a statement. "We believe it's important to ask fans what matters to them, and constantly hear responses centered around getting more creative with merchandise, exploring alternate jerseys, incorporating more elements from uniforms worn by the 1984 team, and steering into the color orange."

ACE TALKS: Tarik Skubal sets goal for last dance with Tigers: Win World Series

Detroit Tigers players Spencer Torkelson and Kerry Carpenter model the new alternate uniforms at the Fox Theatre in January 2026 in Detroit, Michigan.

The Tigers now have five jerseys in their regular on-field rotation: white, orange and City Connect jerseys for home games, and gray and navy jerseys for road games.

The orange jersey will be worn every Friday for home games, while the City Connect jersey will move to select Monday home games.

"The whites are amazing, and those will always be the best ones," said outfielder Kerry Carpenter, who modeled the new uniforms with first baseman Spencer Torkelson in mid-January, "but I think adding two different ones, it's really good to give some more flavor to our uniform, our color scheme and everything."

Fans can purchase all five jerseys.

Both alternate jerseys will be available Friday in the "D Shop" at Comerica Park in Detroit and at Joker Marchant Stadium in Lakeland. The jerseys will then be available Sunday for online orders.

30 MINUTES, 70 PITCHES: Why Justin Verlander's first bullpen in Tigers return was unusually long

The Detroit Tigers unveiled new alternate uniforms for the 2026 season.

The Tigers unveiled the orange and navy alternate uniforms after an 18-month process.

The process centered around gathering feedback from fans and players about what alternate uniforms should look like. Before 2026, the Tigers had been one of only two MLB teams without an alternate uniform, not including the City Connect uniforms, which debuted in 2025.

Fans wanted alternate uniforms.

That was the feedback from hundreds of fans through surveys, focus groups and split testing from team officials.

"Our creative team developed hundreds of concepts that were debuted by colleagues in the front office, fans in focus groups, and players in the clubhouse," Gustafson said. "What you see today is a result of nearly everyone being drawn to the alignment between our existing uniforms and new alternates, featuring the iconic Olde English 'D' and script Detroit, while bringing navy and orange to the forefront. These uniforms are thoroughly rooted in our tradition – fresh takes on Detroit classics – pushing us to evolve with authenticity in mind, just like our city has for centuries."

Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him @EvanPetzold.

Listen to our weekly Tigers show "Days of Roar" every Monday afternoon during the season and Tuesday afternoon during the offseason on AppleSpotify or wherever you listen to podcasts.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit Tigers announce orange, navy alternate uniforms

Tennessee-Texas A&M basketball game injury report

No. 21 Tennessee (16-8, 8-4 SEC) basketball will return to Food City Center on Thursday. The Lady Vols will host Texas A&M (10-11, 3-9 SEC).

Tipoff between the Lady Vols and Aggies is slated for 6:30 p.m. EST. The contest can be watched on SEC Network+ with Zack Nelson (play-by-play), Kamera Harris (analyst) and Sarah Detwiler (reporter) on the call.

Beginning with the 2024-25 athletics calendar, the SEC made it mandatory for schools to provide public reports on availability of student-athletes to participate in each conference game in football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball and baseball.

A Tennessee-Texas A&M initial availability report is listed below for Thursday's basketball game in SEC play.

Lady Vols-Texas A&M basketball game injury report

All Tennessee basketball players are listed as available against Texas A&M on Thursday.

Redshirt sophomore forward Vanessa Saidu is listed as out for the Aggies.

More: 2025-26 Lady Vols basketball schedule, TV, tipoff times

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This article originally appeared on Vols Wire: Lady Vols versus Texas A&M basketball game injury report

Victor Cruz breaks down obvious reason John Harbaugh chose New York Giants

Retired New York Giants wide receiver Victor Cruz isn't surprised that John Harbaugh, fresh off his tenure with the Baltimore Ravens, chose to become the 21st head coach of the Giants despite other opportunities and the team's ongoing challenges.

In a recent interview with FanSided, Cruz highlighted the franchise's deep appeal as the key factor in Harbaugh's decision. He pointed to the Giants' storied legacy and the unique draw of coaching in the nation's biggest market.

"I wasn’t surprised at all. I think when you look at, obviously, the pedigree of the New York Giants and the history and the allure of playing in New York, and I’m sure part of him wants to be the one to bring that team and organization back in the conversation, back to relevancy on a major scale, and I think he wanted to take that challenge," Cruz said.

Cruz emphasized that Harbaugh, a Super Bowl-winning coach with a proven track record, sees significant upside in turning around a historic organization with untapped roster potential.

This aligns with Cruz's recent optimism about the Giants' direction, including his praise for new offensive coordinator Matt Nagy's hire as a step toward making the team "a force in the NFC" with a balanced, downfield-pushing attack.

For Cruz, Harbaugh's choice reflects a desire to restore greatness in a high-profile setting rather than opt for easier paths elsewhere.

This article originally appeared on Giants Wire: Victor Cruz breaks down obvious reason John Harbaugh chose Giants

Jalen Hurts among Bleacher Report's 99 best quarterbacks of all-time

Ranking the 99 best quarterbacks in NFL history is not small task, but that's exactly what the folks at Bleacher Report set out to do this week. While there were no surprises in the top three (Tom Brady, Joe Montana, and Peyton Manning), there were some interesting decisions made over the course of the rankings.

One former Oklahoma Sooners quarterback made the cut, as Philadelphia Eagles star QB Jalen Hurts checked in as Bleacher Report's No. 75 NFL quarterback of all-time. Hurts played just one season at OU in 2019, helping lead the way to a Big 12 Championship, and an appearance in the College Football Playoff. He finished second in Heisman Trophy voting that year. Hurts spent the first three seasons of his college career with the Alabama Crimson Tide.

"At 27, Jalen Hurts is still in his prime, and he has a growing list of accomplishments that have made him an NFL star. The Philadelphia Eagles have clinched a playoff berth in all five years with Hurts as their primary starter, claiming three NFC East titles, appearing in two Super Bowls, and winning one. Hurts won Super Bowl LIX MVP and holds the record for most rushing yards (72) by a quarterback in the Super Bowl." - Bleacher Report NFL staff.

Hurts led the Eagles to Super Bowl LVII after the 2022 season, and played a remarkable game in a narrow loss to the Kansas City Chiefs. Two years later, Hurts led Philly back to Super Bowl LIX, and got revenge on KC this time around. He was named Super Bowl MVP, a feat only he, Patrick Mahomes, Joe Flacco, and Aaron Rodgers have achieved as active quarterbacks. Only Hurts, Mahomes, and Russell Wilson have started in multiple Super Bowls among active QBs.

Hurts ranked one spot below Jeff Garcia in the rankings, and one spot above Alex Smith on the list. While players like Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray were snubbed from the rankings, former OU quarterback Troy Aikman was ranked as the 19th-best QB ever. He spent two seasons at Oklahoma, before transferring to UCLA and becoming a No. 1 overall draft pick and three-time Super Bowl champion with the Dallas Cowboys. Aikman's third Super Bowl, in 1995, was won with former Oklahoma head coach Barry Switzer as the Cowboys' head coach.

Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions. You can also follow Aaron on X@Aaron_Gelvin.

This article originally appeared on Sooners Wire: Former OU star ranked among best quarterbacks ever by Bleacher Report

Brian Windhorst on chances of LeBron James returning to Cavaliers

There seems to be an increasingly likely scenario in which LeBron James will head back to the Cleveland Cavaliers this summer. James, of course, spent his first seven NBA seasons with them, and after leaving to join the Miami Heat in 2010, he returned in 2014 and brought them their first world championship in 2016.

His contract with the Los Angeles Lakers will expire at the end of this season. While a recent ESPN report indicated that the franchise would welcome him back for next season, making the math work in terms of a new contract will be difficult, and James may feel that another team would give him a better chance of winning his fifth championship.

Brian Windhorst, who has covered James since the superstar was in high school, said on ESPN Cleveland radio that it is almost a certainty that the NBA's all-time leading career scorer will return to the Cavaliers this summer — but with a huge caveat.

“He would only come at a discount. The only way the Cavs could add him would be to get him to play at either the minimum, or maybe they could do some things to shave some salary to open the taxpayer mid-level exception where it's $6 or $7 million.

“... If he’s able and willing, and is willing to accept that money, I think it’s 99%.”

According to spotrac.com, the Cavs are currently over the second apron of the salary cap, and as of now, they will be just $870,242 beneath it once the new league year starts. It's hard to imagine James, who will make a total of $52.6 million this season and has never made less than $4 million during any single NBA season, accepting the veteran's minimum salary or even the taxpayer mid-level exception.

However, he is virtually his own brand and conglomerate, which means he can practically print his own money by getting involved in ventures off the court. Plus, there is the sentimental factor of ending his storied career where it all began and playing near his hometown of Akron, Ohio, and that could be hard for him to pass up.

In the end, no one can be sure what James will do until he officially announces his plan for the 2026-27 season or that he will be retiring this offseason.

This article originally appeared on LeBron Wire: Brian Windhorst on chances of LeBron James returning to Cavaliers

2026 NFL mock draft: Broncos boost offense with Bo Nix's old college teammate

In his latest 2026 NFL mock draft for ESPN, Field Yates has the Denver Broncos adding one of quarterback Bo Nix's old college teammates.

Yates has Oregon tight end Kenyon Sadiq (6-3, 245 pounds) landing with the Broncos at pick No. 30 in the first round, which Yates described as "great value" if the tight end falls that far. Yates also believes Sadiq would fit coach Sean Payton's "joker" role as a mismatch tight end.

After playing behind Terrance Ferguson, Sadiq blossomed in an expanded role last fall, hauling in 51 receptions for 560 yards and eight touchdowns. He was a bit player in Nix's final season with the Ducks, totaling five receptions for 24 yards and one score, but Sadiq would still have some familiarity with the quarterback.

Sadiq will likely be a Broncos fan-favorite leading up to the draft due to the team's need for a young playmaker at the position. The 2026 NFL draft will be held in Pittsburgh from April 23-25. After receiving two compensatory picks, the Broncos will hold nine selections this spring.

Social: Follow Broncos Wire on Facebook and Twitter/XDid you knowThese 25 celebrities are Broncos fans.

This article originally appeared on Broncos Wire: 2026 NFL mock draft: Denver Broncos select TE Kenyon Sadiq

Connor McDavid ‘upset’ over missed call in Canada’s quarterfinal

Team Canada and assistant captain Connor McDavid are heading into the semifinal after their quarterfinal win.

But a late play has become the reason for McDavid’s frustration. The Richmond Hill, Ontario native addressed a missed too-many-men call that led to Czechia’s third goal. Canada survived with a 4-3 overtime win, but the moment was hard to forget.

McDavid, who leads the 2026 Winter Olympics with 11 points, admitted the bench missed it too.

“I’m upset we didn’t see it either,” McDavid said. “but everybody’s on the bench watching the game, and none of us saw it, so refs didn’t see it, nobody saw – it seemed like, Glad that it didn’t cost us our tournament, with that being said we definitely gotta be more aware of what’s going on out there.”

McDavid on the missed too many men

“ I’m upset we didn’t see it either but everybody’s on the bench watching the game and none of us saw it so refs didn’t see it, nobody saw it seemed like, Glad that it didn’t cost us our tournament, with that being said we definitely gotta be…

— Ryan Rishaug (@TSNRyanRishaug) February 19, 2026

The play unfolded midway through the third period. A shot by Thomas Harley was blocked by Tomas Hertl. Martin Necas gathered the puck and pushed the rush. Ondrej Palat finished it with a wrister past Jordan Binnington for a 3-2 lead.

Replays showed what appeared to be six Czech skaters on the ice during the turnover. No penalty was called, and the play could not be reviewed under IIHF rules. Canada’s bench reacted late, and confusion marked the sequence. The goal gave Czechia life and put pressure on the top seed.

Coach Jon Cooper declined to comment in detail after the game.

What was IIHF’s response to the missed call?

Hockey analyst Pierre LeBrun reported that the IIHF admitted officials missed Czechia’s too-many-men infraction on the 3-2 goal. He asked a spokesperson and said he admitted that it was a mistake.

“Asked the IIHF for comment on the missed call, 6 Czechs skaters on the ice for their 3-2 goal,” LeBrun posted on X. “An IIHF spokesperson today said they reviewed it and obviously saw what we all saw, there was a missed called there.

“The IIHF says they went through a thorough process to select the on-officials for this tournament, the best of the best are here. But mistakes happen. The spokesperson said everyone involved has regrouped and are focusing on the rest of the tournament.”

Mitch Marner of Canada celebrates with Macklin Celebrini after scoring their fourth goal in overtime to win the match against Czechia in a men’s ice hockey quarterfinal during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. Mandatory Credit: Amber Searls-Imagn Images

However, Canada still recovered after the missed call. Nick Suzuki tied the game with 3:27 left in regulation, and in overtime, Mitch Marner scored at 1:22 on a 3-on-3 play. He attacked with speed and beat Lukas Dostal to the far side. The goal sent Canada to the semifinal at the Olympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026.

McDavid finished the night with two assists, extending his multipoint streak to four games. He has driven Canada’s attack all tournament. The team has outscored opponents 24-6.

Still, the missed call serves as a warning. One lapse can shift a medal-round game, so they should leave no doubt next time.

The post Connor McDavid ‘upset’ over missed call in Canada’s quarterfinal appeared first on The Big Lead.

Mariners News: Bruce Meyer, Spencer Schwellenbach, and Hurston Waldrep

March 1, 2022; Jupiter, FL, USA; Major League Baseball Players Association executive director Tony Clark, right, and chief negotiator Bruce Meyer arrive for negotiations with the players union in an attempt to reach an agreement to salvage March 31 openers and a 162-game season, March 1, 2022, at Roger Dean Stadium in Jupiter, Florida. Mandatory Credit: Greg Lovett-USA TODAY NETWORK

Good morning everyone! The drama continues to unfold with the MLBPA. We’ve got all that and more in today’s links.

In Mariners news…

Around the league…

  • The MLBPA unanimously elected Bruce Meyer to serve as the new Executive Director of the union. Meyer served in the No. 2 role for most of his time since joining the MLBPA in 2018.
  • With Tony Clark now out at the MLBA, Jeff Passan wonders where the union will go from here as it prepares for war with the owners.
  • Braves right-handers Spencer Schwellenbach and Hurston Waldrep will undergo surgery to remove loose bodies from their elbows.
  • At least the Angels are saving their fans from further suffering.
  • Jordan Rosenblum at Fangraphs revealed the OOPSY projection system’s top 109 prospects.
  • Renee Dechert of Purple Row interviewed Rockies GM Paul DePodesta, revisiting his memories of the Moneyball era and talking about his decision not to let the filmmakers use his name in the movie.

Anders’ picks…

  • The estate of the late Paul Allen is planning to put the Seahawks up for sale right on the heels of the franchise’s second-ever Super Bowl win.

Mets 2026 Season Preview: Nick Burdi, a former top prospect, will try to make it work with Mets

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 23: Nick Burdi #57 of the New York Yankees in action against the Seattle Mariners at Yankee Stadium on May 23, 2024 in New York City. The Yankees defeated the Mariners 5-0. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

You can never have enough bullpen options, and the Mets, like every other team during the offseason, searched far and wide to find some intriguing pitchers that they could sign and try out in spring training. One of those options is Nick Burdi, a former second-round draft pick who is looking to rebuild his career after undergoing thoracic outlet surgery and a second Tommy John Surgery within the past few years. He’s enjoyed some limited success in recent season, which he will be looking to parlay into a spot in the Mets’ bullpen.

Burdi, a 33-year-old right-hander from Hinsdale, Illinois, was a standout Downers Grove South High School. He was a quarterback on the football team while also sporting a 95 miles-per-hour fastball. After garnering attention for his athletic prowess, he entered the draft straight out of high school with dreams of getting selected in the higher rounds, but fell to the 24th round. Instead of signing, he opted to go to college, where he excelled as a closer at the University of Louisville, posting a 0.78 ERA in 34 2/3 innings as a sophomore and a 0.49 ERA in 37 innings as a junior.

Those numbers helped him climb 22 rounds in the 2014 draft, where he was taken 46th overall by the Twins—the same team that took him in 2011—and Burdi was quickly tagged as a top prospect. He never did appear in a game for Minnesota, however, and he was eventually taken by the Phillies in the Rule V draft and immediately traded to the Pirates, for whom he made his major league debut in 2018. After two appearances that season, he made the team out of spring training in 2019 and appeared in 11 games for Pittsburgh, allowing nine earned runs on 11 hits, with 17 strikeouts and three walks over 8 2/3 innings. He was sent down in April, and he eventually underwent thoracic outlet surgery in June, which cut his season short. He made three appearances for the club in 2020, but eventually underwent Tommy John Surgery, an operation he also had in May 2017.

He missed all of 2021 while he recovered and was signed by the Padres ahead of the 2022 season, but he never made the team. Burdi eventually landed with the Cubs in 2023, where he allowed three earned runs in three outings before electing free agency at year’s end. His journey brought him to New York, where he signed with the Yankees. He enjoyed his most success at the big league level with the Bronx Bombers, posting a 1.86 ERA with 12 strikeouts over a career-high 9 2/3 innings. He finished the year with a career-best 0.3 bWAR after those 12 outings. He was fairly successful last year with the Red Sox, pitching 5 1/3 scoreless innings, with five strikeouts and two walks. He finished 2025 with a 0.2 bWAR with Boston.

The Mets signed Burdi early on in the offseason, the same day they also signed Robert Stock, Anderson Severino, and Jose Ramos as NRIs. The hard-throwing Burdi will get a chance to prove himself this spring, and given his recent track record and his former “top prospect” status, there is potentially some chance that he can make the roster. The bullpen, as it stands now, is fairly malleable and does have some spots that are left to be decided by the top performers this spring.

It’s far more likely that the 33-year-old Burdi will begin the year in Triple-A, if he accepts his post-spring assignment, and could find his way up to Citi Field later in the year if there are any injuries. But players like Burdi are never bad to have in Triple-A, and he could see some action for the club in 2026.

Chicago Bears 2026 Roster Turnover: The Specialists

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - JANUARY 18: Cairo Santos #8 and Scott Daly #46 of the Chicago Bears celebrate after a field goal during an NFL divisional playoff football game against the Los Angeles Rams at Soldier Field on January 18, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Kara Durrette/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Chicago Bears’ special teams had some big moments in 2026, with Josh Blackwell winning NFC Player of the Week after his block in Las Vegas, and Cairo Santos winning it following his three field goals and onside kick performance against the Packers. And who can forget Jake Moody walking off the Commanders or Devin Duvernay’s last-minute 56-yard kick return to help set up Santos’ game-winner against the Vikings?

It wasn’t all positive for Richard Hightower’s unit, as some inconsistent coverage led to the Bears ranking 11th most in average punt yards allowed per return and 12th most in average kickoff yards allowed per return.

But Santos did start having some success with the “dirty” kickoffs as the season progressed.

Chicago’s third phase didn’t rank as high in Bill Huber’s annual special teams’ rankings at Sports Illustrated as they did a season ago, but they finished in the top half of the league (15th).

Here are the Bears’ current specialists.

Cairo Santos – Signed through 2027 – Some fans have been writing Santos off for a couple of years now because he can’t run out there and try to kick 55-yard bombs on the regular. This may have mattered with a defensive coach like Matt Eberflus, but I think Ben Johsnon would rather go for it on 4th and 2 from midfield than attempt a long field goal. Plus, Santos has been clutch in his career, and he has a good handle on managing the Chicago wind gusts, so let’s all stop pining for the next Brandon Aubrey.

Tory Taylor – Signed through 2027 – Taylor had more “sexy” punts as a rookie last year, but he also punted 22 more times than he did in 2024, when his 82 punts were second most in the NFL. Even with far fewer punts in 2025, he had more trickle into the end zone for touchbacks, so the Bears need to tighten up some coverage.

Luke Elkin – Signed through 2026 – The Bears signed Elkin to a reserve/futures contract earlier this year. He spent the 2025 offseason with the Bears and had a cup of coffee on their practice squad. He also spent a couple of weeks on the Raiders’ practice squad. The 2024 All-American is the only long snapper under contract for the Bears.

Scott Daly – Free agent – The 32-year-old Daly, who played his high school ball at Downers Grove South, has long snapped for the Bears since 2024.

2026 OUTLOOK – Santos and Taylor may get a camp leg to work out with, but I foresee both still in Chicago in 2026.

Cutting Santos would save about $2.6 million, but then adding a quality free agent would eat into that and more. So, unless you really think they’ll trust the job of kicking in Soldier Field to a UDFA rookie or a street free agent, you may as well get used to Santos in the Windy City.

I also think Daly is re-signed to another one-year deal, and he and Elkin will duke it out in camp, with the Bears again going with the veteran.

What do you think the Bears will do at the specialist positions this offseason?

Vote for the 2025 Detroit Lions MVP

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - DECEMBER 22: Jared Goff #16 and Penei Sewell #58 of the Detroit Lions wait to take the field prior to the game against the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field on December 22, 2024 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s time to close out our nominations for the 2025 Detroit Lions awards. Of course, we finish with the biggest award of all: Most Valuable Player.

Before we get into it, make sure you cast your ballot for all of the other awards below.

Previous awards (voting still open!)

Onto our nominations for MVP.

2025 Detroit Lions MVP

Jeremy Reisman: Jared Goff

With an inconsistent running game and relatively poor pass protection, Jared Goff still delivered arguably top-five quarterback numbers, a top-five scoring offense, and helped this team keep its head above water and in postseason contention until very late in the season. I know picking a quarterback for MVP is boring, but Goff’s overall reliability and consistency goes overlooked and underappreciated every year.

Al Karsten: Jared Goff

Goff delivered in 2025 against all odds. Despite a struggling offensive line, inconsistent playcalling, injuries at tight end and along the interior line, and an uneven run game, he put together arguably the most impressive season of his career. At times, he carried the team on his back, uplifting his play beyond what he had shown in the previous two seasons at times, finishing with a 34–8 touchdown-to-interception ratio, a 105.5 passer rating, and 4,500 passing yards. With an elevated offensive ecosystem surrounding him in 2026, Goff could be a serious contender for league MVP.

Erik Schlitt: Penei Sewell

The first pillar of this team’s foundation, Sewell has been in a leadership role for a few years now, and his on-field play is absolutely dominant. A freak of an athlete, Sewell has no limits as a blocker, as he can be left on an island in pass protection and steamrolls defenders in every blocking scheme. Sewell sets a tone of consistency and demands that his teammates rise to his level, a true MVP in every way.

Meko Scott: Jared Goff

The numbers tell the story of Jared Goff’s impact on this team. Amid constant changes to the offensive line and play calling, Goff remained a steady presence who consistently elevated those around him. While his performances against the Vikings left something to be desired, he still finished among the league’s top quarterbacks in passing yards, completion percentage, touchdowns, and explosive plays downfield. It was an impressive season from QB1 that deserves real praise and recognition.

John Whiticar: Jared Goff

I personally dislike how MVP is practically a quarterback award by default, but Goff truly earned it in 2025. In previous years, you could argue that he was elevated by a great offensive line, offensive coordinator, and run game. He had none of these in 2025. John Morton was effectively canned midseason. Aside from Penei Sewell, the offensive line was either injured or disappointing. The rushing effectiveness with Jahmyr Gibbs and David Montgomery took a sharp downturn. Despite all of this, Goff shined, putting together another great season.

Brandon Knapp: Penei Sewell

While Gibbs was a close second for me, the finalist for Protector of the Year has now taken over as the best OL on the team with Frank Ragnow retiring. He did miss one game due to injury, but he helped the most when it came to the run game for the OL and keeping Goff upright. If the team didn’t have him, the offense would’ve taken a huge step back.


Vote for the winner below, and make sure you vote for all the awards linked at the top of the page. Voting will run through this weekend, and the winners will all be announced on Monday morning!

Yankees Birthday of the Day: Chris Stewart

NEW YORK, NY - AUGUST 22: Chris Stewart #19 of the New York Yankees connects on a sixth inning run scoring ground out against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium on August 22, 2013 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

For a team so accustomed to competing at the very top level, it’s easier for the worst of times to stand out more than the best of times. No offense, but if you ask a Colorado Rockies, it’s probably not hard to bring to mind an example of a player who earned a starting role despite underwhelming production. With the Yankees, and with most regularly contending teams, those kind of instances stand out. All of this is a way to introduce the next player in our Birthday of the Day series, who’s likely best remembered as being a particularly underwhelming starter for this team once upon a time.

Christopher David Stewart
Born: February 19, 1982 (Fontana, CA)
Yankees Tenure: 2008 and 2012-13

A 12-year veteran in the big leagues, Stewart spent the majority of his career in a backup role, floating around between teams wherever there was a need as a defensive specialist—especially lauded for his framing, even if not all aspects of his defensive work quite lived up to the expectation of a glove-first player. For one particular campaign, though, Stewart was the primary starter, even if not a full-time starter, and it came under a very unflattering set of circumstances, filling in as the Yankees’ primary backstop back in 2013. But before we get to that, let’s run through Stewart’s career from the beginning.

Stewart started his path with a year of raking in community college in Riverside before being selected by the White Sox in the 12th round of the 2001 MLB Draft. Initially assigned to Rookie ball, Stewart progressed through the minors with Chicago for five seasons until his first cup of coffee in the majors in 2006—his time in the bigs that year was minimal, with only a little over a handful of plate appearances off the bench.

At the end of the 2006 season, Stewart experienced what would be the first of many moves in his big league career—he was traded from the White Sox to the Rangers, where he spent the entirety of the 2007 campaign, mostly in Triple-A, before getting released for the first time. The Yankees took a shot at him, and over a two-month period, he featured in all of one game in the bigs—starting behind the plate in late-April against the Detroit Tigers, a 6-4 loss with the veteran Kenny Rogers outdueling Phil Hughes in Yankee Stadium. In Triple-A, Stewart was a steady presence, maintaining his low .700 OPS.

Stewart’s first prolonged exposure to the big league level came in 2011. Then, with the San Francisco Giants, he was one of the players who had to step in to cover for Buster Posey, whose horrific injury helped lead to changes in the rules forbidding home plate collisions. Although his offensive numbers were pretty poor even for a glove-first catcher, Stewart did enough behind the dish to lead the Yankees to take a second crack at him. Right at the start of the 2012 campaign, the Yankees sent George Kontos to the Giants, a reliever who would become an important part of the Giants’ bullpen for several years.

It was perceived as at least a somewhat-curious choice at the time because it seemed like the Yankees had a fine backup to Russell Martin already in the 26-year-old Francisco Cervelli, who had appeared in 178 games from them across the previous three seasons. But while New York liked Cervelli, they believed even more in Stewart’s pitch-framing ability and wanted the depth, so the former went down to Triple-A. In 55 games for the 2012 Yanks, Stewart accumulated 1.7 fWAR despite a paltry 65 wRC+ — the same as his 2011 with the Giants, but if nothing else, drastically improving his batting average from .204 to .241. Then came his most important season as a big leaguer in 2013.

The year before 2013, the Yankees had Martin as their starting catcher, and the year after 2013, Brian McCann was one of the team’s biggest offseason signings to fill in that role. While neither of these players were their best selves during their time with the Yankees, they belonged in a completely different category than Stewart. The journeyman backstop found himself thrust into the starting role for the Yankees by way of need, if not desperation, for a Yankee team that was struggling to retool while also still trying to contend.

Even if he wasn’t vintage Yogi Berra and was about to turn 30, it was somewhat odd to see the Yankees let Martin walk in free agency without making much of an effort to retain him since he only settled for a two-year, $17 million deal with the Pirates. But that’s what happened, and they set up a battle between the defensively-minded Stewart and the still-well-thought-of Cervelli for the starting role. Both were career backups to that point, vying for the No. 1 spot.

Cervelli won the job for Opening Day and played well in April until his season came to what would be an abrupt end on April 26th, when he broke his hand on a foul tip. He never returned in 2013, as he suffered an elbow injury during his rehab and then got suspended amid the Biogenesis investigation that more famously ensnared Alex Rodriguez. So that meant the Yankees had little choice but to go with Stewart with another no-hit, defense-first option backing him up in rookie Austin Romine.

On the general topic of catcher defense, it’s much better quantified now than it was back in 2013. So while we can look back now and see that Stewart had 2.4 fWAR in 109 games—an honestly adequate personal outcome considering the shaky circumstances—it sure didn’t feel that way at the time. The fact that his hitting somehow got worse from 2012 only made matters more frustrating, as he hit a paltry .211/.293/.272 with a 59 wRC+, a dramatic change for fans who for years had grown accustomed to Jorge Posada’s switch-hit excellence and saw Martin belt 39 homers across the prior two seasons. (As the Yankees struggled, Martin helped the 2013 Pirates snap a 21-year playoff drought.) Even on defense, it didn’t help that Stewart’s 12 passed balls were second-most in all of baseball.

There was also the time that Stewart struck out on just two strikes. Really.

The Yankees themselves deserved the most blame in hindsight for getting too cute at such an important position for the benefit of trying to save Hal Steinbrenner a few bucks. Stewart was unfortunately just the man who had to wear it in front of the fans all year. By September, fans wanted someone, anyone — be it the backup Romine, prospect John Ryan Murphy, recent Double-A promotion Gary Sánchez, or maybe the guy hawking Cracker Jacks — to get a shot behind the plate instead.

McCann was signed in November 2013, and all of a sudden, the Yankees had a plethora of options to choose from as his backup, but obviously not enough room for all of them. Stewart didn’t show enough in his extended sample to move ahead of a now-healthy Cervelli on the depth chart. It was time to move on. As such, Stewart was shipped off to Pittsburgh for a player to be named later, where he filled the role as Martin’s and subsequently Cervelli’s backup as well — Cervelli became the Pirates’ starting catcher in 2015 after Martin signed a big contract with the Blue Jays.

Once he lost that backup role with the Pirates, Stewart bounced around a few teams’ minor-league systems, with his final stop coming with the El Paso Chihuahua in 2019, San Diego’s Triple-A squad. Following his release from the Padres organization in July of 2019, Stewart announced his retirement at age-37.

Reading up on the player, Stewart might’ve featured in the bigs at the wrong time—his most praised skill set was framing, one that didn’t receive the same value it currently does, or at the very least, wasn’t as easily measured. Maybe these days, he would’ve gotten a better overall shake despite his shaky bat.


See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.

What’s the biggest question facing UConn, UCLA, South Carolina, Texas and LSU?

UConn’s Sarah Strong. | Getty Images

With conference tournaments just weeks away, it’s time to revisit the top national championship contenders.

No. 1 UConn, No. 2 UCLA, No. 3 South Carolina, No. 4 Texas and No. 7 LSU all profile as true title contenders this season, but each team carries a specific question that could decide whether they cut down the nets in April.


Could untimely turnovers prevent UConn from repeating as national champs?

UConn has been flawless in the win–loss column, but the ball security standard is slipping relative to their own championship baseline.

Their turnover rate sits at 17.6 percent, which is actually good, but is high compared to some of the efficient UConn offenses that defined their past title runs, especially last year. For a team with national title expectations, even a few extra empty trips per game matter when the margins tighten.

The context is important: UConn is obliterating opponents in most other possession game categories. Their elite offensive efficiency and shot making can mask turnover issues in the regular season, especially when close games are as rare as they are for the Huskies. But against other top-10 teams, each live-ball turnover becomes a runway for transition points and foul trouble, and UConn’s offense is too valuable to be handing away counters like that.

Azzi Fudd tonight 🔥

• 25 points
• 4 assists
• 2 blocks
• 4/6 3PM
• 10/18 FGpic.twitter.com/Q5GW5URe05

— Women’s Hoops Network (@WomensHoops_USA) February 19, 2026

UConn’s press has been so lethal this year, but they haven’t played enough respectable competition to see how truly effective it will be against the great teams.

The question isn’t: “Can UConn win in spite of turnovers?” Rather, the pertinent ask is: “Will turnovers show up at the worst possible time?”

A one- or two-possession Elite Eight or Final Four game is exactly where a spike in turnovers compared to previous title runs could be the difference. The bar for UConn is meeting their own historic, championship-level control of the ball, and if there’s anything to nitpick about this otherwise flawless team, it’d be that.

Will UCLA’s conservative defensive scheme be their downfall in March?

UCLA grades out as the best team in the country by adjusted efficiency, with a 133.6 adjusted offensive efficiency and a stingy defense.

But stylistically, their profile present as key question: “Can a team win six-straight in March when their defense doesn’t force turnovers?” Their defensive turnover rate is just 20.5 percent, modest for a team of their caliber and below what many recent champions have posted.

Some of this is baked into their identity. UCLA’s drop coverage philosophy is designed to wall off the paint, contest shots and dominate the glass rather than gamble in passing lanes. It’s sound, modern defense, but it means they often break even in the possession battle instead of winning it decisively against other elite teams. Against the very best competition, not generating many extra possessions puts a ton of pressure on your halfcourt offense to remain elite every single night.

"What kind of excellence are we relentlessly pursuing?"@UCLAWBB HC @CoachCoriClose on living up to their own lofty standards every day@ESPN_Schick | @BigAntHerron | #B1GThisAMpic.twitter.com/FH7rsvNAa6

— College Sports on SiriusXM (@SXMCollege) February 13, 2026

In a one-game setting, that leaves less margin for an off-shooting night, foul trouble or a cold stretch from 3. Furthermore, UCLA’s defensive rebounding percentage is also on the low side for a team that commits to playing drop. 

The Bruins’ scheme makes them incredibly hard to score on, but they rarely can flip games with a sudden wave of live-ball turnovers and runouts. The big question is whether their discipline and talent are enough to overcome the lack of steals when they face guards who can live comfortably in ball screens and wings who won’t be sped up.

If the possession count stays roughly even, UCLA might need to approach their offensive ceiling four times in two weeks against top-15 opponents.

Does South Carolina have enough offensive firepower to win six-straight games?

South Carolina again looks like a juggernaut by the numbers, with top-five marks in both adjusted offensive (125.5) and defensive efficiency (72.1).

But their offensive profile is far more old-school. They lean heavily on 2-pointers, own the glass and rarely shoot 3s. Their 3-point attempt rate sits at 25 percent, and that number is heavily buoyed by Tessa Johnson; without her volume, the roster is filled with mediocre, low-volume shooters.

The concern is that South Carolina doesn’t shoot enough from 3 to fully weaponize modern spacing. Over a six-game tournament run, you are almost guaranteed at least two games where you need to hit eight to 10 3s to survive. If Tessa is the only consistent, high-volume perimeter threat, that’s a lot of variance being loaded onto one player’s shoulders.

Tessa Johnson tonight 🔥

• 21 points
• 4/5 3PM
• 8/13 FGpic.twitter.com/sNYMz7L0kY

— Women’s Hoops Network (@WomensHoops_USA) February 15, 2026

They’ve gotten big shooting games from players like Raven Johnson in key games this year, but it is also unrealistic to bank on outlier 3-point variance going your way four times in six games against high-level opponents. 

Can Texas’ old-school offense score enough in modern March games?

Texas is a fascinating contradiction: a top-four team in overall efficiency ratings with an offense that looks more 2006 than 2026.

Their effective field goal percentage is solid, but they get there with a diet heavily tilted toward midrange shots, post touches and drives, while posting a very low 3-point attempt rate of 18.3 percent. That’s well below the Division I average 3-point of 34.1 percent, and it leaves expected points on the table in the halfcourt.

The Longhorns make up for this by absolutely owning the possession battle. They have a low turnover rate (16.2 percent) and hammer the offensive glass (41.3 percent offensive rebound rate, top-10 nationally). They also force turnovers at a high rate (32.1 percent defensive turnover rate, eighth nationally), turning defense into offense and padding their shot volume. The problem is that against good teams that can protect the ball and hold their own on the glass, those advantages shrink. When the possession battle narrows, Texas is still stuck with a shot profile that doesn’t generate enough 3s to create separation.

JC WITH A HUGEEEEE THREE 👌🤘#HookEm | @JayMayyapic.twitter.com/ekpRjiwxkJ

— Texas Women's Basketball (@TexasWBB) February 10, 2026

That’s how this team constantly ends up in close games against top competition, even with their talent and toughness. In the tournament, close games often come down to which team can create cleaner, more efficient looks on offense, and Texas’ “prehistoric” process makes that hard to trust. 

Can LSU establish a hierarchy, and grab enough rebounds, for a deep tournament run?

LSU’s numbers scream contender, headlined by their 127.2 adjusted offensive efficiency.

But under the hood, two issues persist.

First, the defensive glass has been surprisingly vulnerable. Despite leading the country in offensive rebound rate at 48.7 percent, their defensive rebound rate is only 26.7 percent, leaving them exposed to second-chance points against good teams who can physically match them. South Carolina’s Madina Okot destroyed them on the glass in their most recent matchup.

Second, their offensive hierarchy is still too muddled for a team with this much top-end talent. LSU spends too many possessions on post ups or touches for non-threatening scorers while not looking for their best player, Mikaylah Williams, to take 3s in volume. That means wasted trips where the ball does not find the hands of the player you want deciding your season. In high-stakes games, the combination of giving up extra shots via poor defensive rebounding and wasting your own trips on low-yield actions is a dangerous problem.

A little 1️⃣2️⃣🏝️ action to get us going 😮‍💨

📺ABC pic.twitter.com/HNByDt030V

— LSU Women's Basketball (@LSUwbkb) February 15, 2026

This is especially glaring because LSU can compete with anyone when locked in.

When they prioritize getting their stars the ball and shore up the defensive glass, they look like the best team in the country on certain nights. The question is whether that version of LSU is the one that shows up in March and early April. If the rebounding focus and offensive pecking order are not tightened, the Tigers are vulnerable to being punked on the boards again and dragged into games where their talent advantage is neutralized by self-inflicted issues.

‘I’ve built myself up over time’ – Habib Beye says he is ready for high-pressure Marseille job

‘I’ve built myself up over time’ – Habib Beye says he is ready for high-pressure Marseille job
‘I’ve built myself up over time’ – Habib Beye says he is ready for high-pressure Marseille job

It’s been quite the week for both Olympique de Marseille and Habib Beye. The former have rearranged the house of cards leading the club, with OM owner Frank McCourt bringing back the recently-resigned Medhi Benatia and moving Pablo Longoria to the fringes. All the while Beye got himself instantly back in the managerial game, but had to go through a process of litigation with his former club Rennes before being available to join Marseille. The two are now reunited once more, with Beye returning to the club he represented between 2003 and 2007 as a defender and club captain. Yet the circumstances couldn’t be any more urgent for Les Olympiens. The club’s objectives are officially to qualify for next season’s UEFA Champions League, without so would risk OM’s financial health. Secondary to that is an opportunity to clinch the first piece of silverware for 14 years in the Coupe de France.“I’ve built myself over time, I gained my first experience in the third division,” said Beye at his first press conference as Marseille manager attended by Get French Football News. “I took the time to take each step as it came, I don’t have anything to prove to anyone. I’m here because I worked hard.”I am ready, I don’t consider that the team is sick. It’s a question of form. There is a high quality of work being done here. Of course it’s another step in my career and I have to step up to it, but I have no problem with that. I feel ready for the pressure. Don’t come here if you don’t want to be exposed to that pressure.” GFFN | George Boxall – Reporting from La Commanderie, Marseille

“It’s been painful,” Keown says Arsenal is missing one key player

“It’s been painful,” Keown says Arsenal is missing one key player
“It’s been painful,” Keown says Arsenal is missing one key player

Martin Keown believes Arsenal are missing one key player who has been hampered by injuries in recent months. The Gunners were held to a 2-2 draw by Wolves in the Premier League, a result that surprised many given the contrast in league positions.

Arsenal remain at the top of the standings, and few would have predicted that they would fail to defeat the side rooted to the bottom of the table. However, the dropped points have increased scrutiny at a crucial stage of the campaign, particularly with Manchester City maintaining strong form in pursuit. Mikel Arteta’s side will be determined to eliminate further slip-ups as the title race intensifies.

Havertz Absence Felt

Keown has suggested that Arsenal’s inconsistency in matches they are expected to win may be linked to the absence of Kai Havertz. The German has endured an injury-disrupted period for much of 2025, yet he has impressed in the matches he has featured in recently. His influence in attack and ability to deliver decisive contributions have added a different dimension to the team.

Arsenal have once again lost him to a minor injury, depriving the squad of a player whose presence can shift momentum in tight contests. While the Gunners are searching for solutions to maintain their winning rhythm without him, his absence has arguably reduced their cutting edge in key moments.

(Photo by Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)

Keown Calls for Match Winner

Speaking as quoted by Metro Sport, Keown emphasised the importance of Havertz’s return. He said, “I would like to see Kai Havertz back, he’s becoming maybe all too important because he’s been injured again.

“That’s not his fault but it’s been painful. You need to get people back because it hurts the group. You need that match-winner, someone who gives everyone belief and puts the game out of sight.”

Keown’s comments emphasise the belief that Arsenal require their influential players to be fit and available if they are to sustain their title challenge and avoid further costly setbacks.

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Match Spotlight: Sami Zayn Vs. Roman Reigns, WWE Elimination Chamber 2023

Roman Reigns and Sami Zayn at WWE Elimination Chamber 2023
Roman Reigns and Sami Zayn at WWE Elimination Chamber 2023 - WWE

The WWE Elimination Chamber Premium Live Event has become the trademark final stop on the road to WrestleMania, but the event does sometimes suffer from feeling a bit inconsequential due to the WrestleMania plans already being set in stone. Outside of the Chamber match (or matches) that determine who gets a shot at the champions that weren't picked by the Royal Rumble winners, a lot of the matches can be a bit formulaic as WWE doesn't want to rock the boat so close to the biggest show of the year. However, that isn't what happened in 2023.

The road to WrestleMania 39 has gone down as one of the most celebrated periods in WWE's recent history. The company was experiencing a fresh boom period thanks to Paul "Triple H" Levesque taking over the creative direction of the company from the "retired" Vince McMahon. He already had a lot of good will from his time booking "WWE NXT" and fans were excited to see what he could produce on the main roster, resulting in boosted ticket sales, TV sales, and overall interest.

Leading the company in the main event scene was The Bloodline Saga. Roman Reigns was no longer "The Big Dog" and had reached his final form as the "Tribal Chief," and along with The Usos, Solo Sikoa, and Paul Heyman, The Bloodline dominated every aspect of the WWE main event picture. Then Sami Zayn came along, the always beloved Canadian who eventually became an honorary member of the group thanks to his devotion to Reigns, and the fact that Jimmy Uso took a shining to him. Jey Uso would eventually warm up to Zayn as well and Zayn went from being a puppy-like cheerleader to an official member of the group.

Things got tricky towards the end of 2022 and the beginning of 2023 when Reigns feuded with Zayn's long-time friend Kevin Owens. After being pushed around by the "Tribal Chief" to take down his friend, Zayn snapped, hit Reigns with a chair at the 2023 Royal Rumble, and the wheels were in motion for a showdown between Zayn and Reigns.

That showdown would come at the 2023 Elimination Chamber Premium Live Event in Zayn's hometown of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It was one of the biggest matches WWE could book at the time, and given Zayn's popularity, there was genuine belief from fans that Zayn could put an end to Reigns' then 902 day run as the Undisputed WWE Universal Champion. Since this year's Elimination Chamber show is right around the corner, let's wind back the clock a few years to shine a spotlight on one of the best main events in the history of the event, Roman Reigns vs. Sami Zayn for the Undisputed WWE Universal Championship.

Read more: Every Paul Heyman Guy, Ranked By Accomplishments

A Big Fight Feel

Roman Reigns and Sami Zayn at WWE Elimination Chamber 2023
Roman Reigns and Sami Zayn at WWE Elimination Chamber 2023 - WWE

Every once in a while, WWE lands itself in a situation where the biggest story in the company ends up in the exact place it needs to be. It happened with John Cena and CM Punk in Chicago, it happened with Cena again when he went to the Hammerstein Ballroom to face Rob Van Dam, and it happened here. There is not a single person inside the Bell Centre that was routing for Roman Reigns. No matter how much work he had put in across his 900+ day run as the "Head of the Table" in WWE, the fans in Montreal wanted to see him get what had been coming to him for months.

You can feel the anticipation through the screen when the bell rings, even after all of the time that has passed since this match went down. The crowd going through waves of excitement, love, hatred, every emotion imaginable just waiting for these two to finally lock up, and when they do, it's absolutely brilliant. Zayn is at his best when he is the scrappy underdog fighting against the odds, and the odds don't get any bigger than the "Tribal Chief," especially when he cuts Zayn off to start his great heat segment. Reigns starts mouthing off to anyone that can hear his voice, he takes Zayn right up to his wife and kids to say "I don't want to hurt your man, but he deserves this." The rest of the fans in the front row are seething as Reigns just swaggers his way through this part of the match. When people use the word "aura" to describe someone, Reigns in this part of the bout is what they mean.

The crowd naturally comes unglued when Zayn starts mounting a comeback, to the point where even the moves that have never put anyone away like the Blue Thunder Bomb and the Sunset Flip Powerbomb produce genuine leap out of your seat moments. It's almost as if the crowd is willing Zayn on, and after both men kick out of each other's finishers, which is a gripe of mine that has just become the norm in wrestling these days, it's anybody's ball game.

Then the referee goes down and you know what's coming by now. Here comes Jimmy Uso to help his cousin out, but Jey Uso is the one to hesitate, causing even more descension in the family that would become important later down the line. The steel chair from the Royal Rumble makes an appearance, and this time it's Zayn who takes a hellacious amount of punishment, and is eventually put down with a Spear as Reigns retains his crown. Some might call it a flat finish, but those people are the ones who genuinely thought Zayn was going to win when the vast majority of people knew he wasn't. Does it need to be over 30 minutes long? Probably not, but it's one of the best "Bloodline" matches from this period. 

The Bloodline Explodes

The Bloodline at WWE Money In The Bank 2023
The Bloodline at WWE Money In The Bank 2023 - WWE

While Sami Zayn might not have known it in the moment, but he ultimately became the reason why The Bloodline fell apart. Roman Reigns' treatment of Zayn made Jey Uso see the light, which led to Jimmy Uso siding with his brother, which resulted in the entire faction crumbling beneath everyone's feet.

To put it simply, The Bloodline Saga is one of the greatest storylines in WWE history and is probably more responsible for the boom period WWE would go on to have in the 2020s than anything else (yes, even more than Vince leaving). With that said, it can't be understated how interest in the story just dramatically dropped once Zayn was no longer a part of the plot. I'm not saying Sami Zayn is the reason for WWE's most recent golden period, but he was the final piece of the puzzle for The Bloodline and the stories that went with it. 

Zayn would reunite with who else but Kevin Owens, who came out to make the save at the end of Elimination Chamber 2023 as The Bloodline looked to beat Zayn down even more. While there were people with genuine arguments for Zayn being the one to dethrone Reigns, Zayn did get a big moment of his own alongside Owens as they dethroned The Usos for the Undisputed WWE Tag Team Championships in the night one main event of WrestleMania 39. To this day, it's the only time the tag straps have had the honor of closing WrestleMania, and those belts were given that platform thanks to the work Zayn and The Usos did in the months leading up to it.

Reigns controversially beat Cody Rhodes in the other WrestleMania 39 main event, but the cracks had already began to show in The Bloodline, and by Money in the Bank in July, the group had a civil war on its hands. Jey was finally able to get out from Reigns' spell and actually handed the "Tribal Chief" his first pinfall loss in three-and-a-half years, earning him a title shot at that year's SummerSlam. As we all know, Reigns would beat Jey at SummerSlam in another match where people thought that would have been the perfect time for Reigns to drop the titles, especially considering the entire saga would fizzle away by the end of 2023.

Fortunately, The Rock would inject some life in the saga at the start of 2024 when Cody Rhodes came back for another shot at Reigns, but that is a match spotlight for another time.

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Read the original article on Wrestling Inc.

“At the moment…” – Chelsea likely to pick three stars on Saturday despite injury situations

“At the moment…” – Chelsea likely to pick three stars on Saturday despite injury situations
“At the moment…” – Chelsea likely to pick three stars on Saturday despite injury situations

Liam Rosenior was again asked about Cole Palmer and Reece James today, and gave an update on their fitness in his presser.

This season has been all about Chelsea trying to get their best players on the pitch, and the last couple of weeks we’ve started to see things coming together.

Reece James and Wesley Fofana have been carefully managed all season, with great success. It looks like we can now add Cole Palmer to that category. He’s struggled coming back from injury, and only recently appears to be finding his feet.

Palmer and James fit and ready to play according to their manager

Cole Palmer trains, with Reece James also present.

Liam Rosenior is constantly asked about the status of these key players in his press conferences, and today gave a similar answer to those he always gives:

“They’re available. I’ve been asked that question a few times since I’ve been in,” the manager said when asked about James and Palmer specifically.

“It’s a really hypothetical question. It’s based on day-by-day. Not just those two players, how each player feels. At the moment, they’re both fully fit. They’re both available for selection. They’ve both trained really, really well today. With those two players on your team, it makes you a really, really strong team.”

Palmer was rested for our last game, and the whole team has had more than week without playing. We’d expect all three to be starting on Saturday.

In other news…

Another injury situation we got an update on was Marc Cucurella. The club are really not giving much away ont that front, which we can’t help but find a little worrying.

Morgan Rogers would be a dream target for many Chelsea fans, but his price tag is a major obstacle to a move right now.

Check out the latest edition of Simon Phillips’ SPTC podcast here:

A whole new ball game for American Football star, Daniel Whelan

A whole new ball game for American Football star, Daniel Whelan
A whole new ball game for American Football star, Daniel Whelan

An Irishman who has carved out his career in the NFL stood in Paradise for the first time today (Thursday), as Green Bay Packers punter Daniel Whelan paid a visit to Celtic Park.

Born in Enniskerry, County Wicklow, Whelan moved to the United States as a teenager before switching from football to American Football, a decision that has taken him all the way to Lambeau Field and the National Football League.

Now firmly established with the Packers, the 27-year-old was taking in the famous home of the Hoops for the very first time. And looking out across the empty stadium, he admitted the occasion had already left an impression.

“It’s a pretty cool experience,” he told Celtic TV. “I can’t even imagine what it’s like when it’s full and loud. It’s so green, I think it’s pretty awesome, to be honest.

“I’m pretty blessed to be here. I never thought I’d ever come here. Even just hearing about it my whole life and getting to actually witness it in person is a pretty cool experience.”

Whelan’s own journey has been anything but ordinary. After going undrafted in 2022, he battled his way through the XFL before earning his chance with Green Bay.

He has since become the Packers’ starting punter, representing one of the NFL’s most storied franchises and following in the footsteps of generations who have chased the Lombardi Trophy.

The 2025 season proved a strong campaign for Green Bay, who secured a play-off berth and showed real promise, only for their run to end short of the ultimate prize losing to longstanding rival, the Chicago Bears, in the wildcard round.

It was not the fairytale finish the team had hoped for, but it reinforced the belief within their locker room that they are building towards something significant at Lambeau Field in Wisconsin.

“The season didn’t end how we thought it would,” Whelan reflected. “That’s part of sports, you are going to have ups and downs. I think we had a good run and a good season overall. We are excited to get back and get going for next season.

“I really want a Super Bowl ring. That’s a special trophy, the Lombardi Trophy, and bringing it back to Green Bay would be pretty awesome, especially at Lambeau Field.”

Ambition is a clear driver for him, and the Irishman is determined that his story in the NFL is far from finished.

Before departing Paradise, he was posed one final question. Would he rather take a pressure penalty in front of a packed Celtic Park or invite Martin O’Neill to Lambeau Field to try his hand at punting? His answer came with a smile.

“Obviously the punting, but I would love to take a penalty here,” he laughed. “I’d bury it and no chance of saving it either!”

Whelan’s journey continues to bridge two sporting worlds of Ireland and the United States and while his sights are firmly set on Super Bowl glory one day, a return to Celtic Park on a matchday remains on the wish list.

Colorado Rockies prospects: No. 6, Robert Calaz

GLENDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 16, 2025: Robert Calaz #76 of the Colorado Rockies bats during the ninth inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Chicago White Sox at Camelback Ranch on March 16, 2025 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by David Durochik/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

6. Robert Calaz (470 points, 19 ballots)

At the end of 2024, Calaz seemed to be on a rocket ship toward the big leagues after a season in which he was named the MVP of the Arizona Complex League and tore up the Low-A California league in a small sample. Instead, the 2025 season saw the 6’2” toolsy right-handed 20-year-old Dominican outfielder repeat in the California League and perform at an above-average (but not elite) level as one of the youngest players in the league. Calaz, who was 24th on MLB.com’s international amateur free agent prospect rankings for 2023, received Colorado’s top international signing bonus in the 2023 January period at $1.7 million, which is similar to what fellow PuRP Sean Sullivan received as a second-round pick in the 2023 MLB Draft.

Mid-season 2025 Rank: 3

High Ballot: 3

Mode Ballot: 4, 6

Future Value: 45, second division regular corner outfielder

Contract Status: 2023 International Free Agent, Dominican Republic, Rule 5 Eligible After 2027, three options remaining

MLB ETA: 2028

Calaz began his professional career with a bang in the Dominican Summer League, producing a 149 wRC+ and playing center field with a bit of right field mixed in. In 2024, Calaz came stateside to play with the Arizona Complex League and flat-out murdered the ball. In 210 PA with the ACL team, Calaz hit ten homers among his 27 extra-base hits with 12 steals in 13 attempts en route to a monster .349/.462/.651 line, good for a 172 wRC+. He led the ACL in several major offensive categories (AVG/OBP/SLG/OPS/HR/RBI/TB) en route to a well-deserved league MVP award. The Rockies promoted Calaz to Low-A Fresno after the ACL season in early August, where he was 3.1 years younger than league average. That didn’t stop Calaz — he hit .327/.386/.571 with two homers, two triples, two doubles, and three steals in 57 plate appearances (147 wRC+).

In 2025, the Rockies chose to send Calaz back to Fresno for a longer run, where he was still 2.2 years younger than league average. The season started inauspiciously, as Calaz suffered an injury in the first game of the season that knocked him out for three weeks. In 424 plate appearances, Calaz hit .259/.338/.399 with ten homers among his 29 extra-base hits. Calaz performed above average offensively (105 wRC+), but not nearly as high as Rockies fans were expecting considering his performance in 2024 at the same level.

Additionally, Calaz struck out in 26% of plate appearances (9% walks), which is pretty high for low minors pitching (though he improved his contact % from 66% to 70% year over year). It is of course important to remember that Calaz only faced a younger pitcher than him in 6% of plate appearances in 2025, but at some point Calaz will need to figure out how to beat upper minors pitching that can execute a scouting report. In the field, Calaz split time between right field (71 games, five assists, nine errors) and center (25 games, two errors).

Here is a look at Calaz from 2025 in Fresno, including some slow-mo looks at his swing:

Keith Law of the Athletic ranked Calaz 11th in the system earlier this month:

Calaz got a lot of attention after he hit .349/.462/.651 in the Arizona Complex League in 2024, but he did so mostly on physical ability rather than a feel for the game, and that deficiency caught up to him in Low A last year. Still just 19, he hit .259/.338/.399 in Fresno with a 26 percent strikeout rate driven by high whiff and chase rates, including a 34 percent swing-and-miss rate just on fastballs. He wasn’t ready for the level and probably needed short-season ball — he would have put up stupid numbers in Grand Junction — so take some of that with a grain of salt, but his baseball instincts just aren’t that advanced yet. He’s going to be big and strong with 30-homer upside in an outfield corner, with a lot of work to do on approach to get there.

Baseball America recently ranked Calaz 9th in the system:

Calaz stands 6-foot-2 with room to add more strength to an already-mature frame. He brings explosive raw power to the plate, though his game remains a bit unrefined. Swing-and-miss concerns have followed him since signing—a common caveat with young, power-first hitters—but they’ve become more pronounced. Calaz’s swing starts with an extremely high hand-set, and he sometimes rests the bat on his shoulder before using a waggle to start his trigger.

Baseball Prospectus put Calaz 49th on their pre-season top 101 prospects list last January on the strength of that breakout 2024. That ranked third in the system, where Calaz was given a 60 OFP grade by Jeffrey Paternostro:

Calaz seemed a pretty easy scout last year, but nevertheless we underranked him. He hit the ball incredibly hard for a 17-year-old, but his contact rate in the DSL suggested better pitching would really undo his swing. Well, he came stateside and hit the ball incredibly hard for an 18-year-old, but made more contact than we expected in the process, making it all the way to full-season ball by the end of the 2024 season. It’s a pretty simple setup with a high back elbow creating a steep swing path that can really do damage in the air when he barrels one in the zone, but while Calaz’s ‘A’ swing is impressive, there’s really no ‘B’ swing a lot of the time, which can lead to in-zone whiff if the pitch isn’t where he expects, or topped/mishit contact even when he tracks it all right.

The thing is, even Calaz’s mishits sound loud, and there just aren’t a lot of teenaged prospects with this combination of damage potential and minor league production, even if it’s come only in the complex and Cal League. I think there is more in the tank here, too. Calaz has already reshaped his body some from last season—not really a surprise for a 17-year-old getting his first couple seasons of professional S+C work—and I’m more confident he will add even more strength and stick on the grass than I was at this time last year. It’s far more likely to be right field than center—he split time at both in 2024—but that’s better than first base or DH, and while the contact rate is still concerning, if he can maintain even this for another year at a higher level, Calaz will be one of the premier outfield prospects in baseball.

Calaz continues to show impressive power for his age, now we just need to see if he can hit upper-minors pitching in a year or two. That’s not that hard, tell ‘em Wash.

MLB Pipeline ranked Calaz fourth in the system as a 50 Future Value player last year, highlighted by a 55 power grade and 50 grades on every other tool:

[Calaz] managed to win the ACL Triple Crown without really having an idea of what he’s doing at the plate yet. Already strong and physical, Calaz hits the ball about as hard as anyone in the system, posting elite-level exit velocities, with tremendous raw power he’s still learning to tap into. He draws walks but still needs to tone down his swing tendencies as he is susceptible to breaking stuff away and out of the zone in particular.

The Rockies feel like Calaz is starting to show the makings of being a five-tool player and he’ll continue to get reps in center field. Most feel that his 6-foot-2 frame will continue to fill out and he’ll slow down more, necessitating a full-time move to right field, where his power production should profile perfectly.

Eric Longenhagen of FanGraphs ranked Calaz as a 40+ FV player (eighth in the system) last January, highlighted by a plus-plus future grade on his raw power, a plus arm, and even a plus future fielding grade:

The power aspect of Calaz’s profile is for real. Perhaps what is most absurd is how much thump he can generate without a leg kick — he starts with a very wide stance and uses just a little toe tap to get going. A very loose athlete, Calaz rotates with verve and ferocity, but in order to do so, his hips often clear very early, leaving him vulnerable to sliders away from him. This is a pretty serious issue already. Calaz ran a paltry 66% contact rate in 2024, worse than all but one qualified big leaguer (Zack Gelof). There are a handful of very toolsy whiff-prone power hitters in that contact rate area, including Christopher Morel and Logan O’Hoppe, both of whom are sound build/frame comps for Calaz. And Calaz projects to have raw power similar to other players in that group, like Brent Rooker and Adolis García. There’s 35-homer ceiling here, but there’s also a lot of bust risk because of how many rookie-level strikeouts we’re talking about.

Calaz is settling more into a right-field role than center and has some big contact rate questions. Still though, plus right-handed power is tough to come by, and the big signing bonus Calaz got is proof positive of its market value. Calaz is clearly a high-ceiling player who at least a couple years away (my bet is a late 2028 debut at age 22) and we’ll see how his plate approach develops as the opposition improves. The recently designated for assignment Yanquiel Fernández has some similar traits and in multiple cases took steps forward in repeat assignments.

Calaz will likely spend 2026 in High-A Spokane as a 20-year-old. I ranked Calaz fourth on my list as a 45 FV player because of the performance, signing bonus, and his ability to stick in the outfield, though I am leery of the contact rate struggles.


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Will the Royals use a six-man rotation this season?

KANSAS CITY, MO - MARCH 27: Kansas City Royals pitcher Cole Ragans (55) throws a pitch in the fifth inning of an Opening Day MLB game between the Cleveland Guardians and Kansas City Royals on March 27, 2025 at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, MO. (Photo by Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

At the end of January, I wrote an article about the Kansas City Royals potentially moving a starting pitcher for prospects. The Royals have enviable depth, and I think there are six guys – Cole Ragans, Seth Lugo, Michael Wacha, Kris Bubic, Noah Cameron, and Ryan Bergert – who really should be in an MLB starting rotation on Opening Day. Stephen Kolek, the Royals’ presumptive #7 going into next season, would be a great back-end of the rotation guy for other teams as well.

My thought when writing the article was that no major league help was coming in a trade for a starting pitcher, and that the Royals would not consider using a six-man rotation during the year. Royals manager Matt Quatraro, however, revealed to Jack Johnson that the team has at least held discussions about using a six starters during the upcoming year:

Asked Q about a potential 6-man rotation:

“Yeah, it’s certainly something we talked about this offseason. It’s tough to manage when you don’t have a ton of relievers to option. But it is something we’ve talked about, especially in longer stretches of games.” #Royals

— Jack Johnson (@JohnyJ_15) February 18, 2026

Quatraro’s answer on this is interesting for multiple reasons. Regardless of whether the Royals decide to try out a six-man rotation this year, it’s great that the team is having the conversation about it and is willing to be transparent with the public that they are thinking through these things. As someone who thinks about the Royals probably more than I should, I’m comforted by the fact that the people running the team are thinking about them even more.

So what would be the potential upside of a six-man rotation? In theory, the starters would be more effective when they pitched and able to go deeper into games. Mike Petriello pointed out at the beginning of 2025 that more pitchers are pitching on five days rest than four days rest anyway, even if a few teams are actively employing a six-man rotation. The Los Angeles Dodgers are planning on using a six-man rotation this year, as that helps Shohei Ohtani manage his two-way load while also being more familiar with World Series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto. The Houston Astros are also considering using a six-man rotation throughout the season, particularly in their jam-packed beginning of the year. The Astros will be incorporating Tatsuya Imai from the NPB to their team, and pitchers in NPB pitch once a week, so a six-man rotation should make his adjustment to MLB smoother.

The 2024 Royals showed how valuable having starters able to be effective and go deep into games was, as that proved to be a key ingredient to the team’s success. The 2025 rotation battled more injuries, particularly at the top of the rotation, and was saved by Cameron’s remarkable rookie season. Can Ragans and Lugo be more effective than they were in 2025 and remain able to pitch all year if they get an extra day of rest between starts? If you are just trying to get your best 26 players on the team, can you really leave out a healthy Bergert?

The potential downside of a six-man rotation is that your best pitchers get fewer starts and have less ability to positively impact your season. Ragans is likely to get five fewer starts in a six-man rotation, assuming that every guy goes on five days’ rest in order. Cameron and Bergert are both great options for the back end of a rotation, but a healthy Ragans is still bette,r and your team is likely to win more games with Ragans starting. In a winnable AL Central, every game matters, which might make the Royals loath to have their best guys pitch less frequently.

Quatraro also mentioned that it is difficult to manage the bullpen if you have six starters and not a lot of relief pitchers with minor league options. Right now, Roster Resource projects the Royals to have eight relievers and five starters; teams are only allowed to carry thirteen pitchers on their roster. Of the eight relievers that Roster Resource projects to make the Opening Day roster, only three have options remaining: Lucas Erceg, Daniel Lynch, and Alex Lange. Something will have gone terribly wrong if the Royals are sending Erceg to Omaha. So if you have seven relievers instead of eight, presumably one of Lange or Lynch will be in Omaha to start the year, and the other one is the only guy who could safely go down if you need more bullpen help.

Roster Resource does project Bailey Falter to make the team, and he is out options, so if the Royals really wanted a six-man rotation, they might have to try and sneak Falter through waivers or be willing to let another team claim him for their staff. An extra pitcher in your starting rotation should make the long reliever more of a luxury than a necessity. The Royals, however, were very willing to shuffle out the back end of the bullpen in 2025 and clearly would like to be able to do so again in 2026.

I did think it was interesting that Quatraro mentioned that the Royals might use a six-man rotation during longer stretches of games. Bergert, Cameron, and Kolek (along with newly acquired Mason Black) all have options remaining and could stay stretched out in Omaha when the Royals have more off days. The Royals have an early stretch, from April 5th to April 27th, where they play 21 games in 22 days. It’s early in the season, so rainouts are certainly possible, but that’s a long stretch right out of the gate. More pitcher injuries happen before the season and early in the season rather than later in the year, so keeping your starters from overtaxing themselves and getting hurt right out of the chute could be a prudent choice. The team also plays 29 games in 31 days from the end of May to end of June, which seems like another stretch where the team could consider going to a six-man rotation.

It’s certainly possible that injuries will render this entire conversation moot. It’s also possible one of the starters will struggle and no longer be deserving of a rotation slot. Still, I’m glad that the team is talking about a potential six-man rotation, and I will be very curious to track if we see one during the busiest stretches of the season.

Who is the best non-division opponent on Rams schedule?

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - SEPTEMBER 15: Head coach Jim Harbaugh and Justin Herbert #10 of the Los Angeles Chargers stand on the sideline during the national anthem prior to the game against the Las Vegas Raiders at Allegiant Stadium on September 15, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Los Angeles Rams have one of the most difficult-looking schedules in the 2026 season. We don’t know yet what order these teams will come in until the NFL announces the schedule but we already know the 14 opponents, including an international “home” game against the 49ers in Australia.

But outside of the NFC West, who is the best team on the Rams 2026 list of opponents?

Recent Super Bowl teams

Chiefs

Eagles

We know that the Seahawks won the last Super Bowl, but also the Eagles went to two of the previous three (won one) and the Chiefs went to five of the previous ix (won three).

Yes, the Rams play teams that have combined for 11 Super Bowl appearances since 2019.

Do you think that the Chiefs will rebound and do you think they’re a tougher out than the Eagles? L.A. must go to Philadelphia in 2026.

2025 playoff teams

Chargers

Packers

Broncos

Bills

Three of these games are at home whereas the Broncos game is in Denver.

The Broncos have Sean Payton, a Super Bowl-winning head coach, and Denver had one of the top-3 defenses of 2025. It’s a tough game but are the Broncos better than the Bills with Josh Allen and a new head coach in Joe Brady? Or what about Justin Herbert-Jim Harbaugh in year 3? Will the Packers breakthrough in 2026?

All four are tough games.

Sean Payton and the Broncos are officially free from Russell Wilson’s contract.

No more dead cap money. pic.twitter.com/vigyyspZ3s

— Zac Stevens (@ZacStevensDNVR) February 10, 2026

Slightly Sleepers

Cowboys

Bucs

Commanders

The Bucs are probably favorites to win the NFC South with Baker Mayfield next season. Sometimes the “second place” schedule doesn’t really fit. Meanwhile, the Cowboys could easily take back the AFC East division title in 2026.

Dallas has interesting pieces in place now with Quinnen Williams, George Pickens, Kenny Clark, and Javonte Williams (assuming he’s re-signed). The Commanders still have Jayden Daniels, so is it hard to imagine a team that reached the NFC Championship in 2024 going back in 2026?

The only teams I didn’t write about is the Raiders and they at least have a new coach who is probably better right now than Pete Carroll; and the Giants, who now have John Harbaugh. Perhaps Harbaugh and Jaxson Dart will win the NFC East. We’ve seen crazier.

Best non-division team?

The Buffalo Bills look to be the best but that’s only because of Josh Allen. Buffalo has salary cap problems and many issues to resolve.

So perhaps the best most complete team is a surprise: What about the Chargers?

Yes, they have had problems in the playoffs and they lost a great defensive coordinator. But if the Chargers get back both of their offensive tackles in 2026, L.A. could look 2x better offensively next season and still have good special teams and defense because they have a Harbaugh.

So no disrespect to the other teams, but with a quarterback, a coach, and a defense, the Chargers might end up being the best all-around team on the Rams 2026 schedule.

Which team would you pick?

Elephant Rumblings: Baseball Countdown, 3,2,1…

Athletics Spring Training facility at HoHhokum stadium. | Matt Kartozian-Imagn Images

As Spring Training kicks into second gear, we have our first game of the season to look forward to on Saturday. It will be our first glimpse of the arms, the bats, and the gloves that our hopes and dreams this season will rest upon…but no pressure guys. There has been a flurry of ‘minor signings” that may add some competition that we didn’t see coming, but I think we’ll largely see what we expected come opening day with a few interesting twists. Of course, the qualifier that always comes into play is real, and that is “barring injury.”

An early projection for A’s Opening Day roster

Last week, A’s Beat Writer Martín Gallegosgave his thoughts on the opening day lineup. With all due respect for a guy who knows this team better than anyone, there are no bold or wild predictions, just solid insights into the roster skipper Mark Kotsay will likely use to start the season.

No surprises at catcher, we can expect Shea Langeliers to be the starter with veteran Austin Wynns serving as primary backup.

First base belongs to Rookie of the Year Nick Kurtz. If heathy, I expect a monster year with no sophomore slump in sight.

Second base will surely go to one of this off-season’s trade acquisitions Jeff McNeil. Coming over from the Mets, he brings a multi-positional resume but will be a real upgrade offensively and defensively over Zack Gelof so until something drastically changes the job at second is his.

The biggest battle this spring will be for third base. We can expect a true competition between Max Muncy, Darell Hernaiz, and Brett Harris. My gut tells me that before his sweet contract extension expires that we might see Jacob Wilson over at third, but I seriously doubt that it will be this season.

Jacob Wilson is pretty much a lock for starting the season at shortstop. The ROY runner-up put together a solid season at the plate and should build on that for 2026. His range is somewhat limited so he may not be there forever but expect him to play a solid short and contribute nicely to the ever-improving offense.

I think we can safely expect Tyler Soderstrom, Denzel Clarke, and Lawrence Butler to roam the outfield on opening day. Soderstrom’s defense was one of the biggest surprises of 2025 having just moved from first base and yet being a finalist for a Gold Glove award. Clarke is a walking highlight reel in centerfield and if he stays healthy will be web gem superstar. Butler is evolving into a team leader and with more plate discipline will continue to grow as an offensive asset to this team. Expect three additional names to battle for the backup outfield roles: Carlos Cortes, Colby Thomas, and Junior Perez.

Veteran Brent Rooker will likely have a lock on the Designated Hitter role, his job for all but twenty-seven games in 2025. With McNeil likely leading off and setting the table for him, I expect Rook and Kurtz to drive in more runs this year than last.

With Andy Ibáñez picked up off waivers from the Dodgers, Max Schuemann was traded to the Yankees. That likely means that Ibáñez will take over the role of super-utility guy for Kotsay.

The starting rotation is far from settled, but all indications are that Luis Severino, Jeffrey Springs, Luis Morales, Jacob Lopez, and recent acquisition Aaron Civale will be the starting five. Civale effectively bumped J.T. Ginn to the bullpen, but it’s a long season so he may still get his shot.

The bullpen will have two fresh faces to start the season. We’ll see Mark Leiter Jr. and Scott Barlow join with Hogan Harris, Justin Sterner, Michael Kelly, Tyler Ferguson, Elvis Alvarado, and Jack Perkins. No closer has been officially named so we can expect a closer-by-committee at least as the season opens.

Only time will tell if this is truly how the A’s start the season, but the great news is, the first pitch is just three days away!

A’s Coverage

MLB News and Interest:

Best of X

Sneak peek 🫣 pic.twitter.com/uS7Zx4u4xw

— Athletics (@Athletics) February 18, 2026

Gage Jump vs. Tommy White. Battle of LSU Tigers. pic.twitter.com/h2F3tidKBr

— Martín Gallegos (@MartinJGallegos) February 18, 2026

A full circle moment for the Biggio family 🧡 https://t.co/MjMW2spvWbpic.twitter.com/mRBphbaE8Z

— MLB (@MLB) February 18, 2026

List of Potential Avalanche Trade Targets

DENVER, COLORADO - DECEMBER 19: Nathan MacKinnon #29 of the Colorado Avalanche faces off against Jonathan Toews #19 of the Winnipeg Jets. (Photo by Michael Martin/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

It’s that time of year to fantasize about all the veteran depth players who might be wearing burgundy and blue within a month’s time. Once the Olympic roster freeze lifts after February 22nd there could be a sudden flurry of activity. The Colorado Avalanche like to do their NHL trade deadline shopping early and certainly have a wish list, are any of the following players on their radar?

Forwards

Jonathan Toews

After numerous reports that the Avalanche were finalists for his services over the summer, it’s curious why there hasn’t been much talk about acquiring veteran forward Jonathan Toews from the Winnipeg Jets, who are clearly in a selling position sitting at over ten point out of a playoff spot currently. He’s enjoyed a decent season with 19 points in 56 games in his comeback after sitting out two seasons.

The 37-year-old center has a very affordable contract of just $2 million for this season but he can earn up to $5 million more in performance bonuses. Most are for games played, which he’s already earned but there’s additional money for playoff performance including an extra $1 million for a Stanley Cup win. Colorado would have to sort out the financials and it’s unclear if Winnipeg would be on the hook for bonuses earned while he was a Jet if he gets traded. If not, at least any bonuses earned over the salary cap can be deferred until next year. But Toews is an intriguing option for veteran center depth which shouldn’t cost a lot to acquire with confirmed interest from the Avalanche in the past.

Chris Johnston: Jonathan Toews is likely deciding between Winnipeg and Colorado – Chris Johnston Show

— NHL Rumour Report (@NHLRumourReport) June 17, 2025

Boone Jenner

Word on the street is that Colorado has been keeping a close eye on the Columbus Blue Jackets lately. The Ohio team is still undecided about selling but currently sitting four points out of a playoff spot must mean they are considering it. No doubt GM Chris MacFarland would love to get his hands on Blue Jackets captain Boone Jenner making an affordable $3.75M in the last year of his contract to fortify center depth. As a rental Jenner could even go back to Columbus in the offseason making a quick reunion with MacFarland even more appealing. Jenner has had a productive and healthy-ish season with 27 points in 42 games.

Bobby McMann

There probably is a long line of suitors for a hard-nosed player who is on pace for his second consecutive 20 goal season, who skates well with size at 6-foot-2 and has a very affordable $1.35M cap hit on an expiring contract. Therefore, it might cost a premium asset or two to nab the 29-year-old McMann, currently rumored to be two second round picks, but if the Avalanche expect to extend him it could be worth it. There’s also the fact of a big goal he scored in Toronto’s overtime win over Colorado just several weeks ago, which surely Chris MacFarland made a mental note of.

🚨 BOBBY MCMANN COMES OUT OF NOWHERE WITH HIS LIGHTNING FAST SPEED TO TIE THE GAME UP ON THE BREAK

WHAT A GOAL 😮‍💨💪
2-2

Via @Sportsnet#LeafsForever

pic.twitter.com/0sf5dU5mBV

— Leafslatest (@Leafslatest) January 13, 2026

Defense

Luke Schenn

Another potential trade target from the Winnipeg Jets is defenseman Luke Schenn. He is on an expiring contract with a $2.75M cap hit. At 36-years-old he is just the veteran defensive depth a contender is looking for, though he is a right shot which Colorado already has a surplus of. There’s a rumor that Luke would ideally like to get moved to the same destination as his brother forward Brayden Schenn, who happens to be a good friend of Nathan MacKinnon. On a contract with more years of $6.50M, a move for Brayden from St. Louis Blues would need a lot more help to make this deal happen but Luke could be the much more affordable addition on his own.

Nick Kypreos: It's believed Brayden and brother Luke Schenn are communicating that they'd like to play together, so it's possible there's an organized effort to get them both at the same time – Sportsnet (1/14)

— NHL Rumour Report (@NHLRumourReport) January 16, 2026

Brett Kulak

The Pittsburgh to Colorado pipeline, and vice versa, has been strong over the past few years and the Ilya Solovyov move earlier in the year only greased the wheels on potential future deals. Defenseman Brett Kulak would give the Avalanche a depth left shot option on the back end at a reasonable $2.75M price tag for the rest of the season. His experience going to the Stanley Cup finals with the Edmonton Oilers multiple years only enhances his resume. The 32-year-old has already been moved once this year from the aforementioned Oilers, which could mean the Penguins wouldn’t mind flipping him despite currently still holding on to a playoff spot in the Metropolitan Division. Fun fact, Kulak also spent half a season with the ECHL Colorado Eagles in 2014-15 as a member of the Calgary Flames organization.

Old Friends

We can never discount familiar faces heading back to the Avalanche, especially those who would seamlessly fit back into the dressing room. There’s been continual speculation about a reunion with several former centers, who would all be a good fit and give the Avalanche needed depth down the middle. Former centers Nashville’s Ryan O’Reilly ($4.5M for one more year) and Calgary’s Nazem Kadri ($7M for two more years) have term on their deals and wouldn’t be easy to acquire or afford but if the Avalanche are truly looking to make a splash at the trade deadline they could be options. There’s also the irony that if Columbus’ Charlie Coyle hadn’t been last year’s Avalanche center trade deadline acquisition he’d be the perfect fit on an expiring $5.25M contract enjoying a very productive season of 42 points in 56 games thus far.

Who would you like to see Colorado acquire? Let us know in the comments!

Trey Hendrickson projected to get $99 million deal in free agency

DENVER, COLORADO - SEPTEMBER 29: Trey Hendrickson #91 of the Cincinnati Bengals lines up before a play during the third quarter against the Denver Broncos at Empower Field at Mile High on September 29, 2025 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

An injury-filled season won’t hurt Trey Hendrickson’s pockets very much it seems.

Daniel Popper of The Athletic has the Cincinnati Bengals pass rusher as his top free agent.

Hendrickson, 31, is projected to get a $99 million deal from the team that signs him.

Though he only played in seven games last year, Popper notes that Hendrickson is still third in the league in sacks with 74.5 since 2020 and also has 15 career forced fumbles.

The writer believes Hendrickson’s high motor and outstanding pass rushing technique make him highly valuable on the open market.

Here’s part of what Popper wrote:

Hendrickson plays with a relentless, urgent motor that puts crushing pressure on a tackle’s outside shoulder. He turns the corner and finishes with a straight-line burst, always hunting for the ball… Hendrickson is dominant with his hands to swipe past a tackle’s strike. He also features numerous changeups off his wide moves, including lethal speed-to-power that takes advantage of a tackle’s momentum.

Popper added that Hendrickson is also a capable edge setter in the run game.

It would seem wise for the Bengals to attempt to retain him or at least tag and trade the star pass rusher. We’ll have to wait a little longer to see what they choose to do.

Michigan Basketball’s best, worst possible NCAA Tournament matchups

Jan 30, 2026; East Lansing, Michigan, USA; Michigan Wolverines center Aday Mara (15) blocks a shot by Michigan State Spartans forward Jaxon Kohler (0) during the first half at Jack Breslin Student Events Center. Mandatory Credit: Dale Young-Imagn Images | Dale Young-Imagn Images

Believe it or not, Selection Sunday is less than one month away. The Michigan Wolverines are riding high following a 91-80 drubbing of Purdue on Tuesday, and all signs point to the Wolverines receiving a 1-seed come Selection Sunday. However, everyone knows being a 1-seed doesn’t guarantee you anything in the NCAA Tournament.

With that in mind, we wanted to explore which teams the Wolverines do and don’t match up well with among the top four seed lines. There’s no doubt Michigan will be prohibitive favorites in each of the first two rounds, but the Sweet Sixteen is when things start to get interesting. This will be an early guide to which teams Michigan fans should want to see in their region and which teams they shouldn’t want to see at all.

Teams Michigan matches up well with

Florida Gators

The Gators are on a heater of late, winning six straight games and climbing to No. 6 in the KenPom rankings. BracketMatrix has them as a 3-seed as of now with plenty of time to climb higher. While they have ample size to match up with Michigan in 6-foot-11 Alex Condon, 6-foot-10 Rueben Chinyelu and 6-foot-9 Thomas Haugh, the Gators are one of the worst three-point shooting teams in the country at 29.4 percent. Chinyelu doesn’t shoot threes, while Condon shoots a decent amount but is just 13 percent on the season. A matchup with Florida would allow Aday Mara to stay on the floor the majority of the game and clog up the paint ruthlessly.

Michigan State Spartans

I enjoy being able to place the Spartans in this category, but we’ve already seen this play out once this season. Sixty percent of their starting five can’t shoot the three-ball well in Jeremy Fears, Coen Carr and Carson Cooper. The key to beating Michigan is having bigs that can shoot and stretch the floor; Michigan State is just about the opposite of that. The Spartan offense is designed around getting to the rim at all cost. The Wolverine defense is specifically designed to stop that.

Vanderbilt Commodores

BracketMatrix currently has the Commodores as the second-highest 4-seed, but they’ve benefitted from a relatively weak schedule. Vanderbilt hasn’t beaten anyone in the KenPom top-25 and also just don’t have the size to matchup with Michigan. Jalen Washington (6-foot-10) is the only player in the rotation taller than 6-foot-7, meaning Mara will have at least a five-inch advantage on every opponent. Tyler Tanner and Duke Miles have been fun to watch, but this doesn’t feel like a team capable of knocking off the Wolverines.

Who Michigan doesn’t match up well with

Iowa State Cyclones

The keys to beating Michigan, in my estimation, are to shoot lights out from three and to speed the Wolverines up to cause turnovers. Check and check for this Iowa State team.

The Cyclones are shooting 39.8 percent from deep, good for fourth in the country and by far the highest of the main contenders. As for turnovers, Iowa State has a defensive turnover percentage of 22 percent, ranking eighth in the country, per KenPom. While Iowa State is certainly beatable, this is a team Michigan would want to avoid.

Illinois Fighting Illini

We’ll see how this plays out next week, as the Illini host Michigan in what could be a conference championship clinching game. However, this is not a team the Wolverines want to see. Illinois has the requisite size to match up with Michigan in 7-foot-2 Zvonimir Ivisic, 7-foot-1 Tomislav Ivisic and 6-foot-9 David Mirkovic — they lead the country in average height. On top of that, seven of Illinois’ eight players in their rotation have hit 25 or more three-pointers this season. Star freshman Keaton Wagler is firing on all cylinders. With a little luck, this is an Illinois team that could certainly win it all.

Houston Cougars

If you know anything about Kelvin Sampson, you know his teams play energetic, rabid defense at the point of attack. That’s no different this year, as the Cougars have the No. 7 defense on KenPom and are ninth in the country at generating turnovers. Joseph Tugler, Kingston Flemings and Emanuel Sharp all rank highly in steals, and the team is first in the country in turnover percentage. Lastly, 6-foot-10 freshman Chris Cenac gives them a legitimate big man who can stretch Mara out a bit — he’s shooting 35.8 percent from three. While Houston is likely to be in a different region than Michigan, this is a team that would pose some problems.

Ravi Ashwin exposes worrying trend about Abhishek Sharma’s batting after third consecutive duck

Photo by Matt Roberts-ICC/ICC via Getty Images
Photo by Matt Roberts-ICC/ICC via Getty Images

Ravi Ashwin has exposed a worrying trend in Abhishek Sharma’s batting after the Indian opener suffered his third consecutive duck in the T20 World Cup 2026.

Ashwin’s assessment comes as Sharma’s sudden slump has become one of the biggest talking points of the tournament, especially given his status as the world’s No. 1 T20I batter heading into the competition.

Ravi Ashwin pinpoints Abhishek Sharma’s troubling batting pattern

Photo by Debajyoti Chakraborty
Photo by Debajyoti Chakraborty

Ravi Ashwin highlighted concerns about Abhishek Sharma’s mindset and batting approach after his latest failure in the ongoing T20 World Cup.

“It is not a technical glitch. Abhishek used to play like this always. But this can play on your head. But I really hope he gets some runs and he has to come good.

“He has got three noughts on the trot, but that doesn’t change how lethal a batter he is in T20 cricket,” Ashwin said.

Ashwin’s comments come amid a surprising downturn in Sharma’s form in the T20 World Cup. Sharma has been dismissed for a duck in each of his last three innings so far, including against the USA and Netherlands, leaving him yet to score a run in the tournament despite his high ranking going in.

What makes this slump particularly notable is that Sharma entered the World Cup on the back of strong performances earlier in the season.

Teams now appear to be deploying disciplined lines to restrict his natural attacking instincts, which has forced him into tentative and ultimately unsuccessful strokes early in his innings.

Ravi Ashwin says opposition bowling strategy is troubling Abhishek Sharma

Ashwin also pointed to a specific trend in how bowlers are challenging Sharma in this World Cup, suggesting it may be contributing to his struggles.

“Abhishek clears his front foot and tries to swing. So an off-spinner bowling has become a trend now. When we played RR vs SRH as well, I bowled 3 consecutive overs and did not go for many.

“He had to get out but narrowly escaped. It is becoming a trend,” Ashwin continued.

He concluded: “They are trying to bowl tight lines. Because it is closer, it is not in his range. There is space to open his hands, but he has to come around it, but by the time he does, the ball has already gone through.”

That analysis reflects broader patterns seen in the World Cup, where opposition teams have bowled fuller and straighter to negate Sharma’s preferred swing-and-power game.

This tactical shift, combined with mounting pressure from consecutive failures, has made his role at the top of India’s order one of the key talking points as the tournament progresses.

Read more:

3 Las Vegas Raiders make The Athletic’s Top 150 free agents

Eric Stokes
INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 30: Eric Stokes #22 of the Las Vegas Raiders stands on the field during the first half of the NFL football game against the Los Angeles Chargers at SoFi Stadium on November 30, 2025 in Inglewood, California. (Photo by Brooke Sutton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We’ve hit the free agency ranking period of the 2026 offseason, and The Athletic’s Daniel Popper released his Top 150 impending free agency. Popper’s list included three Las Vegas Raiders: cornerback Eric Stokes, guard Dylan Parham and defensive end Malcolm Koonce. Let’s see what he had to say about each of them.

Eric Stokes

Rank: 47 (CB5)

A 2021 first-round pick with the Packers, Stokes hit free agency last offseason and had to settle for a one-year, $3.5 million deal with the Raiders. He played well in coordinator Patrick Graham’s scheme, and now he is positioned for a more lucrative free-agent deal. Stokes has length and speed. He is sticky in man coverage and can press at the line of scrimmage with his frame. He is an athletic dropper in zone who is able to keep vision on the quarterback while maintaining positioning within the coverage. Stokes could be more physical in run support, but he is not a liability in this phase. — Popper

Stokes is the biggest conundrum that John Spytek will have when it comes to the Raiders’ in-house free agents. The cornerback had a good year, but he also didn’t get tested much since the defense had issues at the other cornerback spot and covering the middle of the field. So, it could come down to the pricetag, and Popper projects Stokes to fetch a two-year, $20 million contract this offseason. If that’s all it takes, it’d be completely reasonable to re-sign him.

Dylan Parham

Rank: 78 (G9)

Parham has quick feet to mirror rushers and get himself out of compromised positions as a pass protector. He lacks the pad level and power to generate consistent movement in the run game. The pad level issues also show up in pass protection against bull rushes. He loses balance and leverage too often, and he is susceptible on T-E stunts. He lacks some feel and awareness in these situations. — Popper

While Parham has been a solid starter in Las Vegas, it feels like the team was constantly waiting for him to take the next step, and it never happened. The 2022 third-round pick is an average to above-average starter, and the Raiders should be looking to upgrade the position during free agency, in my opinion.

Maclolm Koonce

Rank: 81 (EDGE12)

Koonce is a disruptive pass rusher who uses unorthodox hesitation moves. He puts rushers to sleep and then explodes. He will flash as a run defender, but he is not consistent enough in this phase to be a true above-average starter. He projects best as a situational rusher who can come on for obvious passing downs. — Popper

Spytek gave Koonce a “prove-it” deal last year, allowing the pass-rusher an opportunity to have the contract year he was robbed of with the torn ACL ahead of the 2024 campaign. However, Koonce didn’t have the same explosiveness that helped him rack up eight sacks a couple of seasons ago. In other words, he didn’t “prove it,” so it seems like the Raiders will likely move on from him this spring.

In Other Raiders’ Links:

  • Running backs coach hired: The Raiders added former Iowa running backs coach Omar Young to the coaching staff to guide Ashton Jeanty.
  • Stoic Klint Kubiak perfect for Fernando Mendoza: “Kubiak’s approach harps on team-first, calculated, and disciplined football. And his reserved demeanor is a core tenant to his coaching style,” S&BP’s Ray Aspuria wrote. “…When you take that all into account, it sure sounds a lot like Mendoza.”
  • Raiders don’t want to trade Maxx Crosby: “I was told that the Raiders don’t want to trade him and that if they even contemplated it, it would take a Micah Parsons-type package,” ESPN’s Adam Schefter said on 97.5 The Fanatic’s “Kincade and Salciunas”. “That’s what I was told. Do I think they’re getting two ones and a player? No. Do I think that they’re going to want to trade him? No. Do I think he’ll be traded?…It’ll change by the week, but it’s certainly possible.”
  • Alex Cappa named potential salary cap casualty: “One of the many Raiders mistakes of last offseason was rushing to pay Cappa $5 million,” The Athletic’s Ted Nguyen wrote. “He was coming off a season in which he played like one of the worst starting guards in the league, didn’t look much better last season and couldn’t help a Raiders line that struggled. He’s scheduled to make $6 million next year but the Raiders can save $5 million ($1 million in dead cap) by cutting him and adding to their wealth of cap space.”

Club Brugge targeting experienced replacement for former Liverpool and Sunderland goalkeeper Simon Mignolet

Club Brugge targeting experienced replacement for former Liverpool and Sunderland goalkeeper Simon Mignolet
Club Brugge targeting experienced replacement for former Liverpool and Sunderland goalkeeper Simon Mignolet

At the age of 37, everyone is aware that Simon Mignolet’s time at Club Brugge will be coming to an end soon. The goalkeeper has been a fantastic servant for the club since joining from Liverpool back in 2019. He has gone on to play over 300 games for Club Brugge and has won four Pro League titles and one domestic cup. However, according to HLN, Mignolet could be on the move this summer. In his place, Club Brugge are reportedly eyeing up former Belgian international goalkeeper Koen Casteels.

Casteels certainly won’t come cheap. He is said to be earning €10m a year with his current club  Al-Qadsiah. There is no way that Club Brugge would consider spending that much on the former Wolfsburg goalkeeper, but any return to Europe would require Casteels to take a pay cut. It has not yet been reported whether or not the 33-year-old is even interested in a return to Europe and Club Brugge. However, it is understandable why the side are looking at someone like Casteels to replace a leader in Mignolet.

With his contract up this summer, it does appear that we are seeing the final few months of Mingolet in a Club Brugge shirt. The goalkeeper has shown remarkable longevity on the pitch, with a few injuries here and there keeping him out of action, the former Liverpool and Sunderland man has not allowed his performance levels to drop. If he does leave Club Brugge in the summer, he has to go down as one of the sides greatest goalkeepers after what he has achieved.

GBeNeFN | Ben Jackson

Houston Texans mocks and misses

Every off-season wild rumors swirl around the Houston Texans. Threaded in and around those are mock drafts, rumors of another sort.

This year is really no different. The talking heads need something to get people to click, tune in, listen up and otherwise help them sell you advertising content. So, the wilder the rumor, the more likely we all are to take notice. Particularly if there’s just enough “logic” around it to make it somewhat believable.

The ‘Zilla did a solid job addressing the fact and fiction of the (silly) C.J. Stroud trade rumor. Someone who gets paid to know things, and make up stuff that sounds like he knows it, dropped Stroud’s name as a trade candidate and the disgruntled members of the Texans fanbase grabbed hold of it. As did the fans of other teams who wish they had a quarterback like Stroud (re: a LOT of the total NFL fan base).

In one of the previous regimes, Stroud might already be gone. Brian Gaine, Bill O’Brien and maybe even Rick Smith might have sent him packing for a handful of magic beans ASAP after the disastrous performance in the AFC Divisional playoffs against the New England Patriots.

Since C.J. Stroud entered the NFL in 2023 there are just 3 QBs who have been top 12 in EPA/DB in a season while their team having a bottom 5 run game in EPA/Rush via @NextGenStats.

– 2025 C.J. Stroud
– 2024 Tua Tagovailoa
– 2023 C.J. Stroud
– 2023 Justin Herbert

Improve the… pic.twitter.com/upieyraFa4

— Jacob (@TexansJacob) February 18, 2026

Under Demeco Ryans and Nick Caserio, the only way it makes sense for Stroud to leave the building via trade is if some other team backs up a Brinks truck full of ridiculous compensation such as multiple first round picks, another starting caliber QB and 2 or more starting caliber players of need.

And, that isn’t gonna happen.

Stroud will get another shot at the glory and this rumor will die once the talking heads find something else to fill the 24/7 demand for “fresh” content.

Houston Texans Mock Draft

In the far less ridiculous end of rumors and predictions we see it’s mock draft season. These will continue to arrive hot and heavy for the next 2 months. But, unlike listening to people hotly debate whether Caserio should do dumb things like trade the star QB, mock drafts are usually fun.

PFF has their first 3-round mock all set, with few surprises for those paying attention.

As it currently stands, the Texans are in possession of:

  • Rd 1 – #28
  • Rd 2 – #38
  • Rd 2 – #59
  • Rd3 – #69
  • Rd4 – #106
  • Rd4 – #128
  • Rd5 – #165
  • Rd7 -#244
  • Rd7 – #245

We all should know by now Caserio is a wheeler-dealer with the draft cards, so there’s little expectation it will remain this way. But, it’s what we have right now.

PFF.com

Round 1

28. Houston Texans: OL Caleb Lomu, Utah

Like Spencer Fano, his Utah teammate, Lomu saw his draft stock drop a little in 2025. There are questions about whether he is a better fit at guard instead of tackle. What isn’t in question, though, is that, even in a down year, he earned a strong 82.1 PFF pass-blocking grade and would bolster a still-shaky Texans offensive line.

Round 2

38. Houston Texans (via Commanders): DI Christen Miller, Georgia

59. Houston Texans: C Connor Lew, Auburn

Round 3

69. Houston Texans (via Giants): DI Dontay Corleone, Cincinnati

That’s a lotta love for the lines – which isn’t a bad thing. Landing a guard/tackle, a center and two defensive tackles isn’t a bad haul if even 3 of them end up contributing. Granted, if Nick Caley’s hammer the hole offense is still in vogue, they need an upgrade at tailback. PFF has the Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks taking Washington’s Jonah Coleman at #64 – who would likely make a great addition to the Texans running back room.

Another fun thing the folks at PFF do annually is host the Mock Draft Generator, where anyone can play general manager and run their own draft. Granted, it’s behind a paywall, but if you’re that passionate about the NFL draft, it’s a worthy sacrifice.

I wanted to see what a Texans mock draft could look like if they traded up for Jeremiah Love, so I gave it my best shot and honestly? Sign me up. pic.twitter.com/2E6c9ZDAAO

— James Roy (@JamesRoyNFL) February 7, 2026

MTEN/WTEN: Liberty / UC Riverside, Seattle Recaps

A tennis ball sits on the court at St. Clair High School on Thursday, Oct. 2, 2025. | Brenden Welper/Times Herald / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Oregon men played one meet on Friday, defending their home court at the Student Tennis Center in Eugene from the Liberty Flames 6-1. The Ducks got off to a fast start taking the the doubles point 2-0. The pairs of Matthew Burton / Pierre Mouesca and Vlad Breazu / Declan Galligan won 6-3 and 6-2, meaning the final pair of Cameron Burton / Lachlan Robertson did not need to try to break the 5-5 tie they were playing. The Ducks took the meet in singles play with straight set victories by Brezau and Sam Olszakowski, finished off with a three set victory by Robertson.

Ducks Win!

Lachlan Robertson clinches the match for Oregon. The remaining singles matches will be played out. #GoDuckspic.twitter.com/lAHiRRVSJy

— Oregon Men's Tennis (@OregonMTennis) February 14, 2026

With the meet early in the season and the only competition of the weekend, the remaining matches were allowed to finish and provided some stiff competition. All three matches not only went to three sets, but also to extra games in the third set. Mouesca triumphed but Matthew Burton took Oregon’s only loss of the weekend. Fortunately, Matthew’s younger brother Cameron won the final match of the day to salvage the honor of his family and native Australia.

The men’s team will be off until March, when they will take on UNC Wilmington before promptly beginning Big Ten play with trips to Illinois and Northwestern.


The Oregon women played a double header on Valentines day, sweeping UC Riverside and Seattle University. Against the UC-R Highlanders Virginia Crocker / Hadley Appling had to go to extra games to take their doubles match 7-5, while Tilde Jagare / Olivia Symons defeated their opponents 6-1. Jagare, Appling, Patsy Daughters, and Bridget Mihulka all won in straight sets to put the meet away.

Starting the day with a sweep 🧹 #GoDuckspic.twitter.com/jNEJRFfSvC

— Oregon Women's Tennis (@OregonWTennis) February 14, 2026

Against Seattle, the doubles point was harder to come by as Jagare / Symons took a 7-5 loss, but the Ducks took the other two matches. Singles victories by Jagare, Mihulka, and Hinata Furutani (all in straight sets) took the drama out of the afternoon meet.

Flyin’ high 🦆 #GoDuckspic.twitter.com/lcvh5GOoAv

— Oregon Women's Tennis (@OregonWTennis) February 18, 2026

Mihulka and Furutani are currently undefeated in singles play, as is the freshman doubles pair of Appling / Crocker. Jagare, Crocker, and Daughters have only lost a single match each. This is particularly impressive for Jagare who has played in the #1 spot. The competition will ramp up for the women this weekend at the Red-Blue Invite in Tucson, AZ. There the Ducks will face Grand Canyon University, the University of Denver, and the host Arizona Wildcats.

As always, GO DUCKS!!!

What rule, refereeing trend, or VAR decision type frustrates Barcelona fans the most right now?

(Photo by Angel Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Referees and match officials have been in the spotlight once again this week after some controversial decisions in Barcelona’s defeats to Atletico Madrid in the Copa del Rey and Girona in La Liga.

Yet it’s been happening all season long and not just in La Liga. Games across Europe are often being overshadowed by big decisions that have left fans fuming.

The handball rule regularly throws up controversy, VAR delays are causing frustration, while fractional offside decisions have also been headline news.

The introduction of VAR was supposed to improve this beautiful game of ours but may have already called for it to be scrapped altogether.

So today’s Barca Blaugranes Question of the Day is this:

What rule, refereeing trend, or VAR decision type frustrates Barcelona fans the most right now?

Now it’s over to you! Feel free to share your thoughts, opinions and answers in the comments section below!

Fun with Cubs 2026 photo day

One of the rituals for Major League Baseball’s players every spring is to pose for team and media photographers. These shots get used in a variety of ways; you’re probably most used to seeing them on player pages on various websites, or in the pitcher previews I do here at BCB.

If you think this kind of work is easy, think again. The players had to report to Sloan Park before dawn Monday to begin the shoot at 7 a.m. As a result, some of the poses turn out to be quirky, fun or otherwise notable and those are the photos I’ve chosen to share with you above. If a player doesn’t appear here, it means his poses were… pretty ordinary.

Enjoy the selection below of a couple dozen photos from Monday’s shoot, taken by Chris Coduto of Getty Images and Rick Scuteri of Imagn Images. You’ll see a good cross-section of the spring roster here, including some guys you know well and others… you might not.

I’m pretty sure Alex Bregman is recognizable without the note.

A pensive Dansby Swanson.

Phil Maton shows off his grip.

Jameson Taillon concentrates on that baseball.

Now this guy, you’d probably need the ID for.

Carson Kelly is ready to throw a runner out.

Can you guess the name of this Cub with a big bat? It’s Justin Dean.

Do you recognize Daniel Palencia from his eyes only?

A tip o’ the cap from Caleb Thielbar.

Another cap tip from Seiya Suzuki.

Ian Happ says, “Write your own caption.”

You can see the Jaguar design on Kevin Alcántara’s bat.

“I’ll be back soon,” says Justin Steele.

Another pitcher grip view, from Shōta Imanaga.

Jordan Wicks flips a baseball.

Nico Hoerner shows off his bat.

Just what is PCA thinking right here?

A big grin from Michael Busch.

Matthew Boyd, as if he’s staring down a hitter. Also, in this photo you can see the jersey “vent” that’s been restored for 2026, as MLB goes back to the pre-2024 jersey style.

Cade Horton and his tattooed arm are ready for the season.

The Cubs’ newest starting pitcher, Edward Cabrera, and his glove honoring his Dominican Republic home.

A new addition who might be in the Cubs outfield this year: Dylan Carlson

New Cubs left-hander Hoby Milner smiles for the camera.

Miguel Amaya, ready to hit.

The skipper, looking a lot younger than his age (55).

Syracuse women’s ice hockey heads into post-season

The Syracuse Orange women’s ice hockey team (14-16-4, 10-11-3 AHA) opens AHA post-season play on Saturday afternoon. Syracuse heads west on 90 to Rochester to face RIT (16-17-0, 11-13-0 AHA) in a single-elimination game.

SCHEDULE UPDATE: The game time for Saturday’s match is now 3 p.m.

The Orange will travel to RIT Saturday to face the Tigers in the AHA Quarterfinals!

Syracuse at RIT
Saturday | February 21 | 3 p.m. | Gene Polisseni Center#ichuSepic.twitter.com/YAbC1oc3ky

— Syracuse Ice Hockey (@CuseIce) February 16, 2026

The schools split their season series 2-2 and the winner of Saturday’s game will advance to play either Mercyhurst or Penn State in a Best-of-3 semifinal.

Syracuse’s offense was led this season by Emma Gnade (8 goals and 10 assists) and Jackson Kinsler (7 goals and 9 assists). Goalie Ava Drabyk had a strong freshman season in net posting a 12-15-4 record with a .925 save percentage and 5 shutouts.

RIT has the advantage on offense as they scored 97 goals to just 64 for the Orange, with their AHA leading power play doing a lot of the damage (36 ppg in 33 games). Syracuse is going to have to avoid penalties on Saturday as they enter the post-season with the AHA’s worst penalty kill.

Syracuse has two conference titles in program history and they might get Head Coach Britni Smith back for this game. Smith has been with Team Canada in Milan and we’ll see if she can make it back after today’s gold medal contest.

Saturday’s game is available on FloHockey (fee required). Good luck to the Orange

The Seahawks were so good that opponents started firing people

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - FEBRUARY 11: AJ Barner #88 celebrates during the Seattle Seahawks Super Bowl LX victory celebration and parade along 4th Avenue on February 11, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Steph Chambers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

NFL owners are notoriously sensitive to embarrassment. Nothing like a few billion dollars to make folks squeamish about appearing bad in the public eye.

Which is why the Seattle Seahawks, en route to their second Super Bowl victory, ended up leaving a slew of job openings in their wake. This piece began as a thank you letter to the Minnesota Vikings and ended up with the realization that the Seahawks – through no fault of their own besides sheer competence – inadvertently did a number on the NFL landscape this season.

Here’s the rundown of casualties.

Minnesota Vikings – General Manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah

Adofo-Mensah will enjoy the eternal branding of being the Guy That Didn’t Keep Sam Darnold. It’s almost all anyone could talk about this season whenever Seattle did make its way into the news. The hindsight of “why didn’t the Vikings try to keep Darnold” was evidently too much, and changes were made.

Las Vegas Raiders – Pete Carroll

For risking it on Geno Smith, who also appears to be heading towards a job loss of his own. This one is not for gloating. This is a bummer. Carroll was fired for the second time in two seasons in the same year his former Seahawks won the whole thing. I know he’s happy for them, but that’s gotta suck. In the end, he was the one (or only?) that was most willing to give up capital for Smith, and it enabled John Schneider to pivot marvelously.

Los Angeles Rams – special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn

Rarely is a mid-season move as obviously retribution as this one.

ESPN sources: Rams fired special teams coordinator Chase Blackburn.

The Rams’ special teams played a role in three of the team’s four losses this season, including Thursday night’s defeat in Seattle, and now changes are being made. pic.twitter.com/m6KVuQpMim

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) December 20, 2025

This one is for gloating. Get owned, any unit on the Rams, and thanks for the Special Teams fumble in the NFC Championship Game, too.

Bonus: Linebacker Ernest Jones IV. Thank you for whatever it was you mistakenly saw in him two years ago to result in trading him for a late pick.

Bonus: Wide receiver Cooper Kupp. Again, gratitude.

Bonus: The use of Derion Kendrick in the victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers in Week 2.

Pittsburgh Steelers – Mike Tomlin

Presumably he was involved, or aware at minimum, in the acquisition of DK Metcalf. The second crucial move this offseason that allowed Seattle to pivot and find themselves in a supremely favorable cap situation now. By end of season Metcalf had found himself in trouble yet again, and had not single-handedly saved the Pittsburgh offense. The situation has been so mediocre for so long that, with a 42-year old quarterback and worsening defense, Tomlin shockingly hung it up.

San Francisco 49ers – The hospitality of their stadium in a league-clinching victory, twice

Still cackling at the fact that the Seahawks got to do champagne, cigars, banner-hoisting, baby-kissing, and whatever else in the Levi’s Stadium locker room twice. What a trip.

Bonus: The apparent salvation of Sam Darnold.

It’s also worth noting that multiple coaches have left the 49ers, most notably Robert Saleh and Brian Fleury, leaving at least the hint of awareness that San Francisco is third in the division right now.

New Fangraphs Prospect List Has 8 Washington Nationals In The Top 100

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZONA - NOVEMBER 01: Luis Perales #91 of the Salt River Rafters throws a pitch during an Arizona Fall League game against the Scottsdale Scorpions at Scottsdale Stadium on November 1, 2025 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Fangraphs recently released its top 100 prospects list for the 2026 season, with 3 Nationals appearing on the list, Eli Willits at 15, Jarlin Susana at 29, and Harry Ford at 74, with Travis Sykora just missing the list and being in their next 10 off at 109. Yesterday, they released another prospect ranking, this one via their projection system OOPSY, which relies heavily on a prospect’s peak performance in the minor leagues rather than their most recent performance, and it had a lot of love to show towards the prospects in the Nationals farm system, with a stunning 8 Nats making the top 100.

List is absolutely littered with Nats
Travis Sykora #8 !
Alejandro Rosario #24 !!!
Jarlin Susana #34
Harry Ford #45
Eli Willits #59
Luis Perales #73
Devin Fitz-Gerald #96 https://t.co/xKjlrGZdKK

— Paul Cubbage (@PaulCubbage23) February 18, 2026

The first shocker on the list is Travis Sykora at 8, making him their third-highest-ranked pitching prospect, right behind Trey Yesavage and Jonah Tong and ahead of highly acclaimed pitchers such as Bubba Chandler and Nolan McLean.

Players are ranked by their projected peak season fWAR, and OOPSY projects that number to be 4.0 for Sykora at his peak, which would have made him a borderline top 10 pitcher in MLB in 2025. While I expect the ranking is only accounting for Sykora’s performance and doesn’t factor in his current injury, it’s still exciting to see a projection system be so high on the Nats top pitching prospect.

Another shocker on the list is Alejandro Rosario coming in at 24, making him their 7th-highest-rated pitching prospect with a peak fWAR projection of 3.5, which would put him in top-20 starting pitcher territory in 2025. It’s unsurprising that a list that values a player’s performance so heavily would rank Rosario highly, as his 2024 minor league season was one of the best by a prospect in recent memory. Like Sykora, I expect this ranking isn’t accounting for Rosario’s current injury, but it’s exciting nonetheless to see him so high on a prospect list.

Not far behind Rosario is Jarlin Susana, coming in as the 8th highest rated pitching prospect and 34th overall, with a peak fWAR of 3.3. While it’s a high rating for the big righty, it’s actually lower than his 29th overall ranking on Fangraphs main top 100 list, as the site has always been higher than most others on him.

Harry Ford checks in on the list at 45, a strong ranking for the Nats’ newly acquired backstop. OOPSY projects the bat to be above average, but also is a believer that he can be a positive defender behind the dish in the bigs, a sentiment not all rankings share.

The wildest ranking on this list, which I missed the first time I looked because I didn’t even think to look for him (and he was still labeled as a Ranger), has to be Yeremy Cabrera at 53rd overall, with a peak fWAR projection of 2.9, which would make him a top 10 centerfielder in baseball in 2025. While the projection sees the bat just slightly above average, it believes his speed and defense will be both well above average and make him an impactful everyday player.

Willits appears on the list at 59, much lower than his 15th overall ranking on the main Fangraphs list, but still the highest of all 2025 MLB draft prospects. To be expected, a list that values minor league performance will be lower than usual on prospects who haven’t debuted professionally or have very little time there, and it’s a testament to Willits performance in his short time in Low A in 2025 that he’s even this high on the rankings.

Luis Perales makes the list at 73rd overall, giving the Nationals 4 of the top 16 pitching prospects in the sport, according to OOPSY. It’s clear that whatever numbers and formulas are used to create OOPSY’s rankings, Paul Toboni has a very similar model he uses to make his moves.

Rounding out the list for the Nats is Devin Fitz-Gerald at 96, his first appearance on any top 100 list to my knowledge. He is listed as a third baseman, interestingly enough, and OOPSY projects him to be an above average defender there with a slightly above average bat.

Overall, while this list shouldn’t be treated as gospel, it’s exciting to see so many Nationals make an appearance, as lists like this in the past have been scarce when it came to Nats prospects.

The Shotgun Throwdown is back. Here’s your Thursday open thread.

Feb 18, 2026; Morgantown, West Virginia, USA; A West Virginia Mountaineers cheerleader performs during the second half against the Utah Utes at Hope Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Ben Queen-Imagn Images | Ben Queen-Imagn Images

The Shotgun Throwdown is our daily open thread, a place to keep tabs on what’s happening throughout the day.

This is your space to talk through the stuff that pops up throughout the day (and night) — news, rumors, random thoughts, questions, complaints, celebrations, anything you think feels worth talking about. I’ll be dropping in anything newsworthy as the day unfolds.

West Virginia news, Big 12 chatter, realignment whispers, recruiting nuggets, coaching rumors, portal watch, TV schedule griping, or just whatever’s bouncing around your head — it’s all fair game here.

WVU men’s soccer spring slate set: five matches, three at Dick Dlesk
It opens with back-to-back trips to Pittsburgh (Riverhounds, then Pitt) before a three-game home finish in April.
wvusports.com
Graveline shows up fast — and WVU can use him a bunch of different ways
The Ohio State transfer homered twice in the opening sweep and gave Sabins flexibility at catcher and in the outfield.
wvmetronews.com
Oklahoma State’s scoring machine is up next as WVU fights for Big 12 position
The Cowgirls bring the league’s top offense to Morgantown Saturday with seeding and a double-bye still on the table.
wvmetronews.com

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NFL draft profile 2026: Jacob Rodriguez (Linebacker, Texas Tech)

Texas Tech linebacker Jacob Rodriguez (10) finished fifth in the Heisman Trophy voting. (Chris Torres/Fort Worth Star-Telegram/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

If you watched college football this past season, you have heard the name Jacob Rodriguez. The linebacker took the nation by storm as the leader of a Red Raider defense that won the Big 12 and earned a bye in the College Football Playoffs. Despite all of his production this past season, Rodriguez finds himself having to continue to prove himself as someone who can be a consistent contributor at the NFL level.

The basics on Jacob Rodriguez

Position: Linebacker

Class: Senior

Size: 6’1 233 pounds

Age: 23 years (September 6, 2002)

Draft Projection: Mid 2nd round- early 3rd round

Defensive stats viaSports Reference

Jacob Rodriguez Scouting Report

Texas Tech Red Raiders linebacker Jacob Rodriguez was the best linebacker in college football this past season, cemented by earning the Butkus Award this past December. Rodriguez also placed fifth in Heisman trophy voting this season, a pretty remarkable outcome for any defender. However, Rodriguez’s journey to the NFL Draft started on the other side of the ball. Rodriguez was a three-star recruit as a quarterback out of high school and committed to the University of Virginia, where he played for one year before transferring to Lubbock.

Perhaps it’s his experience as a quarterback that makes him seem so instinctive on the field. The leader of the Red Raiders’ defense always seemed to be one step ahead this past season. His game is built on instincts, reliability in the run game, and feel for creating turnovers. Most mock draft simulators currently project Rodriguez as an early-to-mid-third-round-pick. Given his production at Texas Tech this past season, along with a standout performance at the Senior Bowl, Rodriguez is someone who could go much earlier than anticipated come April.

Rodriguez is not nearly as physically gifted as Ohio State’s Sonny Styles or Arvell Reese, both of whom project to be selected in the top half of the first round, but Rodriguez possesses the skills and profile to be a long-term starter for whichever team drafts him.

This is every one-on-one rep for Texas Tech LB Jacob Rodriguez in coverage at the Senior Bowl:

He was beating the crap out of these poor RBs. pic.twitter.com/LQL2n5gBzP

— Marcus Mosher (@Marcus_Mosher) January 30, 2026

Despite his size, Rodriguez possesses exceptional skills in one-on-one coverage. At the Senior Bowl, he was a force in the backs-on-backers drill, showcasing his ability to cover

The conversation for Jacob Rodriguez being one of the best LBs in the entire country has to begin.

155 total tackles, 5 sacks, 5 FFs, 2 INTs over the past 18 games.

Texas Tech has an absolute stud dude.
pic.twitter.com/qnoL4foTlE

— Garrett Armbrust (@4thandsaturday) October 5, 2025

Rodriguez is a turnover machine. He intercepted four passes this season and forced a whopping seven fumbles. While judging a defender solely based on turnovers is not good practice, it does speak to Rodriguez’s ability to consistently position himself around the ball and in the best position to help his team.

Jacob Rodriguez is not nearly the athletic freak that Sonny Styles and Arvell Reese are, but he always finds a way to be around the ball. pic.twitter.com/Z3NzXnP5gO

— Joey Bray (@byjoeybray) February 18, 2026

Standing at 6-1 and 233 pounds, Rodriguez isn’t close to being the most physically gifted linebacker in this class. Because of his size, he struggles as a rusher and to avoid linemen when engaged in a block. His size will be the biggest knock on him, but with a player as gifted as Rodriguez, a team will be willing to take a shot on him on day 2 at the absolute latest.

Strengths

  • Exceptional athlete with good coverage skills. Rodriguez can cover running backs and tight ends with ease.
  • Great ball skills and makes it a point to try to impact the game by forcing turnovers.
  • Impact run stopper. Excels at sniffing out run plays and moving downhill.
  • Feel for the game shines throughout his tape. His time as a quarterback gives him the unique ability to read offenses and create turnovers at a high rate.

Weaknesses

  • Limited ability as a pass rusher.
  • Undersized compared to most elite linebacker prospects, can have trouble in blocking against bigger linemen and receivers.
  • Relies on anticipation and timing more than explosiveness.
  • Rodriguez is not a slow player, but he won’t post a blazing 40 time like other top LB prospects may.

What others are saying about Jacob Rodriguez

Matt Holder, Bleacher Report

Jacob Rodriguez was hands-down the best linebacker in college football this season. The Butkus Award winner is a turnover machine with impressive instincts as a run defender. However, he lacks NFL length/size (listed at 6’1″, 235 pounds) and traits to be a high-level prospect in the 2026 draft class.

Emmett Matasovsky, Sports Illustrated

Rodriguez exceeded expectations during Senior Bowl practice week, showing instincts against the pass that had been a point of contention. His lateral movement and bend are phenomenal, especially in spite of his physical limitations.

Samuel Teets, Chiefs Wire

Rodriguez uses springy footwork and lateral agility to exchange gaps and make quick corrections to mirror the running back. He naturally flows to the football, especially on zone run plays. Rodriguez isn’t the most explosive athlete, but he flashes the closing burst to prevent running backs from slipping past the defense’s second level.

Brett Kollman

Random prospect note.

Jacob Rodriguez is about to become an NFL linebacker and he won't even have the coolest job in his own marriage.

His wife is a Blackhawk pilot in the Army.

— Brett Kollmann (@BrettKollmann) February 16, 2026

Rodriguez’s fit with the Steelers:

The Steelers desperately lacked physicality from their linebacking unit in 2025. Given the fact that Rodriguez displayed multiple years of willingness and instinctiveness to be able to stop the run effectively, he would immediately slot into the defense as one of the best run stoppers on the team.

With so many question marks around what the Steelers will do with linebackers Patrick Queen and Malik Harrison, given their contract situations, this is a position we could very well see Pittsburgh target early on come April. It’s also important to note that Rodriguez’s former coach, C.J. Ah You, is a part of the Steelers staff now. Regardless of who is in the room, Rodriguez is the type of player who could step in and be an impact player day one for whoever drafts him.

You can find all of BTSC’s draft content and player profiles here.

What are your thoughts on Texas Tech linebacker Jacob Rodriguez? What players would you like to see us profile next? Join the BTSC community and let us know in the comments below!

Donovan Mitchell reveals keys to making two-big lineups with Evan Mobley and James Harden work

WASHINGTON, DC -  DECEMBER 12: Donovan Mitchell #45 and Evan Mobley #4 of the Cleveland Cavaliers high five during the game against the Washington Wizards on December 12, 2025 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Kenny Giarla/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers have had incredible success with the Donovan Mitchell and James Harden pairing through three games. The fourth game will present a new challenge with Evan Mobley returning to the lineup on Thursday against the Brooklyn Nets.

Harden has often thrived in predictable and perfectly spaced lineups. Adding a second big onto the floor will complicate that. It isn’t a configuration that Harden has had much recent experience playing in. Whether or not it works will largely come down to Mobley.

Mobley’s outside shot has regressed this season. He’s shooting just 30.4% from beyond the arc after connecting on 37% of them during the previous two seasons. This includes hitting just 21.1% of his outside looks since the beginning of December.

Unless the shooting drastically changes, Mobley will have to find other ways to take advantage of the double teams and micro advantages that Harden creates.

“I think just Evan, continuing to build up what he did last year, and obviously, earlier this season,” Mitchell said. “This year, I think he was more of a downhill [finisher] right before he got hurt. … Now, him being able to do that, but also be able to be elite in the half roll — elite in the pocket — and obviously at the rim. Those are the two biggest things.”

Mobley has been a good rim finisher this season. He’s converting 73% of his looks inside (75th percentile). That’s key to being able to attack mismatches in the short roll, but that isn’t everything.

This season, Mobley has improved as a passer. He has a career-high assist rate (17.9%, 86th percentile), which has led to four assists per game. The ability to finish as a scorer or passer inside isn’t a question. Whether or not he can do so quickly enough in the half roll still is.

Mobley has always been at his best when he’s decisive. When he reacts quickly and assertively in the short roll, good things happen. This has been talked about a lot with him as a scorer, but it extends to him as a facilitator as well.

Conversely, if his initial read gets cut off, he can run into some trouble. A lack of decisiveness is a problem whether he’s in the short roll specifically or not.

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That all said, we don’t exactly know how the two-big lineups are going to look with Harden yet.

Harden brings a much different dynamic to the offense than Darius Garland did, even though Garland was incredibly good at getting the bigs involved. Both guards do a lot of the same things functionally, but how they go about doing so is vastly different.

“Until you get out there and try it [you don’t know], especially with a new player,” Head coach Kenny Atkinson said. “Donovan is kind of used to it (playing with two bigs). We’ll see with James. But James, again, his IQ is so great that I don’t anticipate the issues with it. I think he’ll find a way. But it could take a little bit.”

It’s also worth pointing out that the Cavs will continue to play most of the game with one big on the floor. On the season, Mobley and Jarrett Allen have only played an average of 15.4 minutes together per game. That will alleviate some of the bumpiness that integrating the two bigs together might cause.

“Kenny has done a great job, even last year, kind of staggering the two,” Mitchell said. “I think Evan and I get back to playing kind of how we’ve been doing. And with J.A. and [Harden], I think we really found something.”

Making this trade when the Cavs did was also a huge bet on Harden’s ability to just figure it out. The offensive talent on this roster hasn’t been an issue over the past few seasons. That’s undeniable. How that talent fits together has been at times, especially in the postseason.

So far, Harden has helped solve some of those problems, but working with the two-big lineup will be a different challenge. As of now, he doesn’t seem to be worried about making it work.

“There’s just so many opportunities man…the way the offense moves, you have rolling bigs that finish around the rim, when Ev comes back it’s gonna be even better,” Harden said last week. “Just figuring it out, when Ev comes back…we have two bigs so we got to figure out what works and what doesn’t work. But that shouldn’t take long.”

Max Verstappen says F1 career closer to ending after 2026 rule changes

Photo by Mark Sutton - Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images
Photo by Mark Sutton - Formula 1/Formula 1 via Getty Images

Max Verstappen has hinted that he’s thinking about the finish line of his Formula 1 career, with the sport heading into one of its biggest overhauls in recent memory.

The Red Bull driver hasn’t held back in his opinions during pre-season testing, raising concerns about the new hybrid power units and how they’re set to shape racing dynamics.

The Red Bull driver has suggested that Formula 1 has become ‘Formula E on steroids’ due to the new hybrid power units, and described ‘management’ as the key buzzword that drivers will be concentrating on this year.

Liberty Media might not be thrilled with Verstappen’s critiques, but his straightforward approach hasn’t hurt his standing among fans.

He’s also talked about wanting to finish out his F1 days with Red Bull, though he could easily stick around motorsport in other ways, given his growing interest in sim racing and GT3 competition.

Max Verstappen ‘very happy’ with his career as he focuses on life outside Formula 1

During an appearance on the Up To Speed Podcast, Verstappen was asked by Naomi Schiff about where he sees himself on his path to leaving F1 and what he hopes to do afterwards.

Verstappen replied: “Well, definitely closer to the end, that’s for sure. I mean, honestly, like it’s a tough one. I would say, of course, the current regulations are not helping the longevity of my career in Formula 1. Let’s say it like that.

“But it doesn’t matter. I’m very happy with my career anyway, already in Formula 1.

“I can easily leave it behind. I have a lot of other projects. And also, I mean, who actually cares when you’re 60 or 70 years old if you have won four titles or 10 because you’re getting old and I prefer to spend that [time] with my family and really spend time with them before they are also not there anymore.

“That’s something that over time the realisation that I start to see. Like last week I was skiing with good friends and family and my sister’s boyfriend they’re getting married so these kind of moments then you realise this is fantastic being able to spend a few days together appreciate life for sure.

“Who cares trying to go 24 times a year around the world trying to hunt for another title and when you’re 60 years old or whatever like I don’t care if I win four or eight.

“I want to live my life you only live once and I don’t want to spend 25 years of that in racing a car.

Who should Red Bull focus on if Max Verstappen leaves?

Piastri has been mentioned as a possibility for Red Bull while questions remain over how long McLaren can keep both him and Lando Norris satisfied within their setup.

If Ferrari continues struggling into another season, Leclerc could again become linked with Red Bull as rumours resurface about him leaving Maranello for Milton Keynes.

Read more:

Cowboys DC Christian Parker: We have to go day by day, build defense the right way

It became clear early in the 2025 season that the Cowboys would need to overhaul their defense this offseason and the first big step in that process was the move to hire Christian Parker as their new defensive coordinator.

Parker got a chance to lay out some of his approach during a press conference on Wednesday. One of the questions he faced was how quickly he thinks he'll be able to turn around a unit that allowed the most points in the league last year and Parker declined to put any timetable on how long it will take to rebuild the unit.

"I don't think we want to put any expectations on it in that regard," Parker said. "I think we just want to kind of take it day by day and do it the right way. So, we're kind of just taking that approach. We'll get our head out of the sand at some point, but right now we got tunnel vision on doing things the right way."

One of the criticisms of last year's defense was that previous coordinator Matt Eberflus didn't build his scheme around the skills of the players on hand. Parker said that stopping the run and affecting the quarterback are the pillars of any defense, but that he's not beholden to any particular way of making that happen.

“I think you build it around the players," Parker said. "Of course, you want to have your core principles and foundational beliefs. But, as you kind of move forward in the process, what do your guys do well? How can you put players in highlighted positions, create one-on-ones for certain guys? How can you protect certain guys? If we can win on blitzs on a running back, then we're going to blitz a lot. If we got good man-to-man corners, we're going to play man. If we're better than zone vision, we'll play more zone. You want to build a package that has diversity in scheme and then you want to tailor it to the players you have.”

The identity of all of those players won't be known for some time, but the hope in Dallas is that Parker can mold any group into a more effective one than the Cowboys put on the field last year.

We now know simple cost for Bills to trade for Eagles' A.J. Brown

We now know simple cost for Bills to trade for Eagles' A.J. Brown originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The Buffalo Bills need a star wide receiver.

Since the moment Stefon Diggs left town, Josh Allen hasn't had a true No. 1 pass catcher, and while he has made plenty of good things happen with the motley crew around him, things would likely look much better with a dynamite weapon on the outside.

That's where A.J. Brown could potentially come in.

The Philadelphia Eagles' disgruntled WR had a bumpy 2025 season with drama on and off the field. Despite that, he still put up more than 1,000 yards.

There's no real question around the NFL that Brown is still immensely talented. It's just a question of whether he even wants to be in Philly.

ESPN's Dan Graziano suggested in a new article on Thursday that the Bills are one of four possible destinations for Brown if the Eagles try to trade him. The others? Cleveland, Baltimore and New England.

"Whether general manager Brandon Beane thinks so or not, quarterback Josh Allen could really benefit from a true No. 1 wide receiver to stress defenses," Graziano writes. "And Brown's 2026 contract is not an overpay financially for a top WR."

MORE: The Packers are facing a bit of a ripoff with Malik Willis

Graziano goes on to predict what a Bills-Eagles trade for Brown would look like, and he keeps it quite simple: Brown for the Bills' first-round pick in the 2026 NFL Draft, which is the No. 26 overall selection.

"It's tough to imagine Buffalo getting a surefire, instant-impact playmaker at its current draft slot in the first round," Graziano writes. "So why not use it to get a veteran one? Is there a more win-now situation than Buffalo's? As for the Eagles, a first-round pick for a 28-year-old wide receiver with only one year of guaranteed money left on his contract doesn't sound like a bad return."

There's a chance that price isn't enough for the Eagles, and then the Bills might be forced to try to use the 26th pick on a wideout anyway.

But if they can get Brown with that draft pick, it might be the best path forward for Allen's chances of leading Buffalo to a Super Bowl.

More NFL news:

Three MLB teams that will be surprisingly bad in 2026

This is the time for optimism. The 2026 baseball season is upon us, so let’s have some good thoughts. If only it were that easy, though. By the time we hit the All-Star break, and then certainly by the end of the season, there are bound to be some disappointed teams and fans. While we want to champion good vibes and optimism, it’s not realistic. So, at the risk of causing some outrage and disappointment, let’s take a look at three MLB teams that I’m expecting to be surprisingly bad this season.


RELATED: Yankees, Aaron Judge championship window might be closed

3. Toronto Blue Jays

Nov 1, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Ernie Clement (22) celebrates with first baseman Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (27) after scoring against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the sixth inning during game seven of the 2025 MLB World Series at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Kevin Sousa-Imagn Images

Not only were the Toronto Blue Jays the team all of Canada was behind last season, but they essentially became North America’s team by the time we got to the World Series. It was a great story, but I just can’t be optimistic about heading into 2026.

They do get a full season of Dalton Varsho, and considering his struggles, it’s not a huge loss, but Anthony Santander is already done for the 2026 season. Will George Springer duplicate his 2025 season of full health and elite performance? How will Kazuma Okamoto’s game translate to major league baseball? Replacing Bo Bichette also won’t be easy for the Blue Jays.

From a pitching standpoint, the Blue Jays did add Dylan Cease and Cory Ponce, which was successful. Getting a full season of Trey Yesavage generates optimism, but after a deep postseason run, are we really confident in Kevin Gausman and Jose Berrios? Shane Bieber is also experiencing arm issues, so cracks are beginning to show. And as exciting as Yesavage was, he’s still a rookie who will have an adjustment period in his first full major league season.

While generally a solid closer, it’s also fair to have some questions about Jeff Hoffman. Overall, the Blue Jays are still a good team, but thereare some concerns. That’s especially true on the offensive side of the ball. Playing in the American League East doesn’t help, and I can see them finishing anywhere between first and fifth.

2. San Diego Padres

Yes, the San Diego Padres still have Manny Machado, Jackson Merrill, and Fernando Tatis. With those two superstars, will they ever truly be “bad”? But they aren’t going to win 90 games again like they did last season.

After Machado and Tatis, things get rough for San Diego. Signing players like Ty France and Miguel Andujar is not what we’ve become accustomed to for the Padres. Money is becoming an issue for San Diego, and its prospective capital is diminishing.

Getting Joe Musgrove back from injury will be a nice addition, but what can we expect from him after missing 2025? Michael King is also healthy after missing substantial time last year, but can we trust him?

Replacing Dylan Cease with German Marquez is not what we’ve gotten used to seeing out of the Padres in recent years. There are still some solid pieces, but their depth has taken a hit. The Padres are operating on a thinner margin than we were previously used to.

1. New York Yankees

Oct 8, 2025; Bronx, New York, USA; New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) reacts to striking during the eighth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays during game four of the ALDS round for the 2025 MLB playoffs at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Yes, I’m going to go there. It’s not going to be a good season for the New York Yankees in 2026. The margin of error isn’t exactly high. After essentially deciding to run things back from last season, the Yankees have to hope that Aaron Judge, who is another year older, can physically hold up.

Health looms large here as the Yankees need Giancarlo Stanton’s elbows to keep him in the lineup as well. The return to full strength for Anthony Volpe could be a nice bonus for the Yankees. They also need Trent Grisham and Ben Rice to repeat their 2025 performances as the margin of error is thin.

Gerritt Cole returning to action, and not missing a beat, is a necessity for the Yankees’ pitching staff. The same can be said for Carlos Rodon after elbow issues last year. By all accounts, both are progressing as they should be, but New York has a lot invested in their health. Beyond that, they are relying on Cam Schittler, Will Warren, and Luis Gil. While they did trade for Ryan Weathers, who has never been able to stay healthy, the Yankees are asking a lot of their young pitchers with limited depth behind them.

Things could go from bad to worse quickly here for the Yankees if there are one or two issues or injuries. The tough AL East doesn’t help either. 

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WTA Tour schedule change for Alex Eala has knock-on effect for Elina Svitolina

Photo by Ted ALJIBE / AFP via Getty Images
Photo by Ted ALJIBE / AFP via Getty Images

Alex Eala is set to face Coco Gauff in the quarterfinals of the 2026 Dubai Tennis Championships.

Eala, who closed out Centre Court sessions in both the second and third rounds, has been moved up to start the night session this time around.

Following her match against Gauff, Elina Svitolina will take on Antonia Ruzic in the next quarterfinal.

It might not seem significant at first glance, but this change could have a knock-on effect on crowd numbers for Svitolina’s match later in the evening…

Alex Eala schedule change may impact crowd for Svitolina’s quarterfinal

Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images
Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images

If there’s one thing the early rounds of the Dubai Tennis Championships have shown, it’s that Eala has quickly become one of the sport’s biggest draws.

Her fans follow her wherever she goes and have supported her every step of the way in the UAE.

That’s great for Eala and the tournament, as Filipino supporters have done wonders for ticket sales, but there is a knock-on effect for other players.

A large portion of Eala’s fanbase (not all!) are there to support her, and that’s as far as they’ll go.

It isn’t a problem when she’s scheduled last on, with fans happy to watch earlier matches before their main event takes centre stage. We saw evidence in round three when Gauff and Mertens played out a three-set battle in front of an energetic crowd.

But everyone knew who most people had come to see. Gauff even apologised during her post-match interview, noting how long Eala’s fans had been waiting to see their favourite player. However, when Eala isn’t closing out the session, it can lead to issues. It doesn’t seem likely that many Filipino fans will stick around after her match ends to watch Svitolina take on Ruzic next.

The timing change could mean plenty of empty seats by then – something that might not have happened if they’d kept Svitolina vs Ruzic first up. It would be unfortunate for Svitolina – a former world number three and four-time WTA 1000 champion – to play in front of just a few hundred fans instead of what could have been a full stadium if she’d been scheduled ahead of Eala.

The switch doesn’t add up from that perspective, though no doubt tournament organisers felt they had their reasons behind it.

Eala’s quarterfinal time change suits her fans back home

It’s listed as ‘Not before 7pm’ local time, which in Manila is 11pm. Since the second match depends on how long the first goes, it could easily push past 9pm local time, which would mean a start after 1am in the Philippines.

That makes for a late night back home. Scheduling Eala earlier helps Filipino fans catch her match at a more reasonable hour.

As Eala’s profile continues to grow, especially with backing from Smart Sports and her consistent performances on the tour, there’s clear value in supporting that fanbase.

But it might also be an opportunity missed. There are good reasons to keep her later on the schedule too.

If Filipino viewers are tuning in specifically for Eala, they’re naturally going to catch whoever plays before her. That exposure could help other players build their own followings in the region.

If Svitolina and Ruzic had opened the session and delivered a quality match, some fans might stick around or take note of them for future tournaments.

That said, many will likely switch off once Eala’s match ends — and you can’t blame them at that hour.

This is one of those situations where there isn’t an obvious right answer. Every scheduling decision comes with trade-offs. But if organisers want to maximise Eala’s growing influence, they’ll need to tread carefully with future choices like this one.

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Mikel Arteta obsesses over the tiniest details. Is it now harming Arsenal’s title chances?

It was the sort of scene that just shouldn’t be possible for a team in command of first place.

Arsenal were going seven points clear and 2-0 up against the Premier League’s doomed bottom side – only to end the match arguing with Wolves players, after a chaotic late equaliser.

They suddenly looked like a team out of control.

For the first time this season, the title race is not completely in Arsenal’s hands (Jacob King/PA Wire)
For the first time this season, the title race is not completely in Arsenal’s hands (Jacob King/PA Wire)

There is a profound irony there, that could be seen in Mikel Arteta’s shell-shocked post-game press conference.

That is because he is a manager who seeks to control more about his team than any manager, including Pep Guardiola.

It is both the reason that Arsenal are where they are and also a problem that may ultimately prevent them getting where they really, really want to go. The very desire itself has become another issue.

In trying to fulfil all of that, Arteta has been empowered to fully indulge an instinct that was already there – and has taken them this far – but may now start to be self-defeating at the crucial moment when victory is so close.

Those who know Arteta say he is the ultimate “probabilities guy”. He looks at every single detail – right down to the temperature on the ice baths and the steering wheel on the bus – and assesses what can be done to statistically improve the chances of success there.

Some around the club have already started to wonder how that fits with the selection of Viktor Gyokeres as the main striker signing, a struggling player who may unfairly become a lightning rod for criticism if this doesn’t happen for Arsenal.

Other sources insist that Arteta is no longer playing to the strengths of such attackers, in the way he did around 2022 to 2024. This can be witnessed in relatively pitiful goal numbers for attackers.

Arsenal blew a two-goal lead at Wolves and have a five-point lead over Manchester City, who have a game in hand (Jacob King/PA)
Arsenal blew a two-goal lead at Wolves and have a five-point lead over Manchester City, who have a game in hand (Jacob King/PA)

And it is here where this desire for control is starting to turn into a lock, that is beginning to prevent Arsenal pushing on.

Arteta has become so obsessed with increasing probabilities that it is starting to make a long-awaited title less likely.

The team has become so controlled that they’re becoming constrained. The last two matches – a 2-2 draw against Wolves and 1-1 against Brentford – were vintage examples.

Arsenal went ahead in both games and could have kept playing as they were playing against inferior sides, but they seized up and consequently lost control of the game.

There’s just no need for it to happen, but the fact it does points to something psychological, where their biggest opposition genuinely is themselves.

Their approach is too clever for its own good, too over-coached, removing a freedom from players that becomes exhausting.

Arteta’s team are bidding to end a run of three runner-up finishes in a row (Jacob King/PA)
Arteta’s team are bidding to end a run of three runner-up finishes in a row (Jacob King/PA)

Hence this angst about everything, the deep desire for the title interweaving with Arteta’s innate desire for control to amplify the negative effect of both.

It now means the Basque has to get a hold of this to stop it becoming a negative cycle.

Arteta has already told his players that nothing is actually lost yet so they should enjoy the journey, but he may have to go further back in his own journey with this team; to look back to 2022-23.

The very approach is so different to four years ago and even two years ago.

Hence we have this situation where Arsenal are certainly a better squad, with more qualities, but don’t seem to be able to maximise what they’ve got in the same way.

In 2022-23, after all, many opposition coaches genuinely used to marvel at how difficult they were to play against. Arsenal would pen a team in, with the whirl of movement around Martin Odegaard and Bukayo Saka then unravel them. There was real life, but there wasn’t yet experience.

Questions of Arsenal’s title credentials have come to the surface as the draw at Wolves continued a pattern (Getty)
Questions of Arsenal’s title credentials have come to the surface as the draw at Wolves continued a pattern (Getty)

The team was ultimately too young for the title and wasn’t yet ready, for which there’s no shame. They were also up against a Manchester City who finally became European champions and treble winners. It was asking a lot for a team on their first title challenge to reach that level.

Arsenal did get there the next season, and the 16 victories out of the last 18 games of the 2023-24 campaign were probably the best spell of the Arteta era. They were there, having got to 89 points.

City, the most lavish project ever witnessed in football, still just had more. They got two more points.

But that is also why last season might have proven another hinge moment, that could yet have turned things in the wrong direction.

Guardiola endured an unprecedented crisis, partly related to his own power at City, and the opportunity was there for Arsenal. Just at that moment, though, they suffered a series of injury crises themselves. Questions were naturally asked about training, and Arteta's approach there. Again, that control.

The manager’s solution to that, however, was just to greatly deepen the squad last summer.

Arsenal’s Viktor Gyokeres during the Premier League match between Wolverhampton Wanderers and Arsenal on Wednesday (Arsenal FC via Getty)
Arsenal’s Viktor Gyokeres during the Premier League match between Wolverhampton Wanderers and Arsenal on Wednesday (Arsenal FC via Getty)

But this might have been where that desire for control – this will to constantly increase probabilities – was taken to recruitment, too.

Arsenal had greater numbers, but they didn’t necessarily have greater quality. The squad was widened but it wasn’t raised.

The attack, consequently, does not currently have that greater killer quality that most champions possess. They don't even have the goals of Chelsea's Diego Costa in 2014-15 or 2016-17.

A question persists over whether they should have taken the money for Gyokeres, Noni Madueke and maybe even Eberechi Eze and just gone bigger on guaranteed stardust; to really test a club’s willingness to keep a player in the way champions do.

The effects of this can be witnessed in the goal numbers.

The following is a rather crude statistic in the era of proper analytics, but it still really feels like it matters. Who scores for Arsenal when they really need a goal; when they need an opener, an equaliser or a match-winner; those genuine clutch moments that do require teams to go deeper in themselves?

Arsenal's Gabriel Magalhaes celebrates with William Saliba (Action Images via Reuters)
Arsenal's Gabriel Magalhaes celebrates with William Saliba (Action Images via Reuters)

When it comes to openers, equalisers or match-winning goals, Martin Zubimendi, Mikel Merino and Gabriel are on top with a mere three each.

The numbers for the attack just aren’t good enough, which is precisely why it feels like Arsenal are now receding. They’re not pressing home.

Leandro Trossard and Saka are top of this statistic, with just two each. One of Saka’s was last night. Gyokeres does have two, too, but one of those was a penalty against Everton after Odegaard gave him the ball.

This is generally not champion material. They need more. You need players that offer those moments.

Costa is raised because he offered eight of these goals in 2014-15 and 11 in 2016-17. Eric Cantona famously got four match-winners in consecutive games in 1995-96, contributing to 11. That same season, Ian Wright got seven for Arsenal. The formation of attacks might have changed in the modern game, but the need for individual inspiration does not.

There’s an obvious point to be made here that talents like Odegaard and Saka should now be producing more as they come into their primes, at 27 and 24 respectively, but then you also return to the question of play, and control.

Is the team still geared that way to maximise their talents? Do they have the emphasis they did over 2022 to 2024? Or is it now too minimalist?

None of this is to say Arsenal won’t win the league. They’re still in a good position. They’re still probably the best squad in the country – maybe Europe – with the qualities to press this home.

It’s just that, in a classic contradiction, it is right now as if they are currently reducing their own strong chances.

Arteta needs to get a hold of it, but that may involve being able to let go.

Where to watch Olympic men's curling semifinals: Schedule, times, TV channels, live streams for 2026 playoffs

2026 Winter Olympics Curling

Where to watch Olympic men's curling semifinals: Schedule, times, TV channels, live streams for 2026 playoffs originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The final four is set in men's curling at the 2026 Winter Olympics, with the semifinals on tap Thursday. 

The biggest surprise is the absence of Sweden, which has won gold, silver and bronze, respectively, at the last three Olympics but finished a stunning ninth of 10 teams in the round-robin this time. That opens the door for new blood on the medal stand.  

MORE:Updated medal count for Canada at 2026 Winter Olympics

Switzerland enters the bracket as the favourite after going 9-0 in round-robin play, a huge turnaround after finishing seventh four years ago. The Swiss downed No. 2 seed Canada 9-5 in the preliminary round but the sport's biggest power won't go out quietly. 

Canada has reached the semifinals in every Olympics since curling returned to the Games in 1998 and missed out on the medals only once, when it lost to Switzerland in the bronze medal game in 2018. 

Will those two play for gold or will Great Britain or Norway pull the upset? Here's how to watch all the action. 

Where to watch Olympic men's curling semifinals

  • TV channel: CBC
  • Live streams: CBC Gem

The CBC will have coverage of the curling semifinals, which can also be streamed via CBC Gem. 

What time are the Olympic men's curling semifinals? 

  • Date: Thursday, Feb. 19
  • Time: 1:35 p.m. ET

The men's curling semifinals are set to begin at 1:35 p.m. ET on Thursday, 30 minutes later than originally scheduled due to delayed starts for the final women's round-robin games earlier in the day. 

Olympic men's curling playoffs schedule

Thursday, Feb. 19

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
1:35 p.m.Semifinal: Switzerland vs. Great BritainCBC Gem
1:35 p.m.Semifinal: Canada vs. NorwayCBC, CBC Gem

Friday, Feb. 20

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
1:05 p.m.Bronze Medal GameCBC, CBC Gem

Saturday, Feb. 21

Time (ET)EventTV/Live stream
1:05 p.m.Gold Medal GameCBC, CBC Gem

2026 Olympics men's curling round-robin standings

TeamW-L
Switzerland9-0
Canada7-2
Norway5-4
Great Britain5-4
USA4-5
Italy4-5
Germany4-5
Czechia3-6
Sweden2-7
China2-7

Olympic men's curling medal winners

Here are the medal winners in men's curling since the sport returned to the Olympics in 1998:

YearGoldSilverBronze
2022SwedenGreat BritainCanada
2018USASwedenSwitzerland
2014CanadaGreat BritainSweden
2010CanadaNorwaySwitzerland
2006CanadaFinlandUSA
2002NorwayCanadaSwitzerland
1998SwitzerlandCanadaNorway

Debutant Edozie makes impact on Premier League title race

Tom Edozie celebrates
Tom Edozie helped Wolves earn only their 10th point of the Premier League season [Getty Images]

Wolves debutant Tom Edozie dented Arsenal's title hopes with his late equaliser on Wednesday and in scoring, affected the title race.

The forward's goal - which deflected in via the post and Riccardo Calafiori - saw the Gunners blow a 2-0 lead to draw 2-2 at Molineux.

It stopped them going seven points clear at the top of the Premier League - instead they are five points above Manchester City.

Pep Guardiola's side have a game in hand and Arsenal must travel to the Etihad on 18 April.

It means Edozie's name could be etched as a decisive factor in the title race after he came off the bench with six minutes left to make his Wolves bow.

Edozie joined Wolves as a 16-year-old having been at the XYZ Football Academy in London and signed his first professional contract in 2024.

The academy, which helps players who have not been able to secure scholarships, has seen more than 40 players progress into full-time football.

The brother of Southampton winger Sam Edozie has been training with the first team for about two weeks, having been a regular for the under-21 side.

"He's impressed us with some really nice moments, he's technically a gifted player, but we're still learning about him ourselves," said boss Rob Edwards.

"We just had a feeling and sometimes you have a feeling and then that gut is proved right.

"As he was coming on, I just put my arm around him and said, 'this could be your moment, go and take it'."

Newcastle’s Anthony Gordon responds to Man United transfer links

Newcastle’s Anthony Gordon responds to Man United transfer links
Newcastle’s Anthony Gordon responds to Man United transfer links

Newcastle forward Anthony Gordon has broken his silence on speculation that he is on the radar of Manchester United and other Premier League heavyweights.

In demand

United are expected to strengthen their attacking ranks in the upcoming summer transfer window, especially because of the expected permanent exits of Marcus Rashford and Jadon Sancho.

Sancho is set to become a free agent upon the expiry of his United contract, while Rashford is likely to join Barcelona on a permanent basis amidst his impressive loan stint.

United are exploring the market for reinforcements in the left-wing position and have lined up moves for the likes of Yan Diomande (RB Leipzig), Mateus Mane (Wolverhampton Wanderers) and Gordon.

Newcastle have endured a challenging Premier League season, and as things stand, securing a guaranteed Champions League spot looks like a tall order. With questions lingering over Eddie Howe’s long-term future, the Magpies now face a period of instability that could lead to the departure of some of their key players.

A recent report covered by The Peoples Person relayed that United and Liverpool are battling to sign Gordon. It was indicated that United are prepared to offer as much as £87 million to lure Gordon to Old Trafford.

However, the England international has insisted he is not aware of any interest in his signature as he reaffirmed his committment to Newcastle.

Gordon responds

Gordon spoke to reporters after his superb performance in Newcastle’s 6-1 Champions League victory over Qarabag on Wednesday. He scored four goals.

Asked about the growing noise that he could be on his way out of Tyneside, Gordon answered [as quoted by ChronicleLive], “About me? I haven’t seen them. What are they saying?”

“It’s the same old, same old. I think they just pick names out of a hat. They do (names out of the hat). I haven’t heard anything; they might want to tell me before they tell you (the media).”

On whether he wants to be a Newcastle legend, Gordon remarked, “Of course. I have gone through enough transfer stuff now to know that it is all a load of rubbish.”

He added, “I am focused on me and focused on the team, I am focused on right now. You look too far in the future and you start to underperform. And believe me I have done that (before) and I am not going to do that now.”

United are next in action on Monday when they face Everton at the Hill Dickinson Stadium.

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Monaco duo Maghnes Akliouche and Denis Zakaria doubts to face Lens

Monaco duo Maghnes Akliouche and Denis Zakaria doubts to face Lens
Monaco duo Maghnes Akliouche and Denis Zakaria doubts to face Lens

AS Monaco may have to contend with two more high-profile absences when they travel to face RC Lens on Saturday afternoon. 

The Principality club’s season has been blighted by an unrelenting injury crisis. And there is no sign of it stopping as they head to face Ligue 1 leader Lens at the Bollaert. Maghnes Akliouche and Denis Zakaria were not included in first-team training on Thursday morning.

Speaking in a press conference attended by Get French Football News, Sébastien Pocognoli confirmed that both are doubts for the game. Akliouche is still managing the hip injury that he sustained during the win over FC Nantes. He started against Paris Saint-Germain on Tuesday, despite that niggle. For Zakaria, it is more a question of managing the club captain’s minutes.

Ansu Fati could, however, return, having missed the midweek UEFA Champions League defeat to PSG (2-3). Christian Mawissa will not face Les Sang et Or, but Pocognoli says that he may return next week.

GFFN | Luke Entwistle – reporting from Monaco

'Tiny bit of light in one of our darkest seasons'

Your Wolverhampton Wanderers opinions banner
[BBC]

We asked for your views on Wolves' 2-2 draw with Arsenal.

Here are some of your comments:

Chris: I heavily criticised them after the Forest game, but tonight they were totally different. Lacking in skill but they fought hard and deserved the point. We are relegated but I want to see us go down fighting with our heads held high. After going an early goal down they could have folded but they didn't. I am proud of them.

Toby: Wolves are a bit like a mixture of jelly beans. You never know what you're going to get. We didn't do anything special but we did what we needed to do. Well done the Wolves.

Mike: Excellent second half after being far too passive in the first. A well-deserved point but no doubt all the experts will say it was a poor performance from Arsenal. Wolves showed great character to come back from conceding the second goal when we had started the second half on top. Excellent point, great finish by Bueno and no-one should be trying to take the equaliser from Edozie.

Wol: I thought we showed great spirit to come from two down against a team who have quality throughout their team and it was a well-deserved point. Nice to see Edozie have some time on the pitch and hopefully we will continue playing with this new-found fighting spirit for the rest of the season.

Rupert: We have developed some solid shapes and good collective understanding of positions and patterns. We still lack experience and quality in all positions. I still believe Andre and Gomes are very, very good players. Armstrong has surprised me for the better! We seem to have goals from most players. Look at our bench vs Arsenal's!

Steve: A thoroughly deserved point for not giving up, I feared the worst after five minutes. A tiny bit of light in one of our darkest seasons.

Pacers vs Wizards Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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The NBA All-Star break didn’t do much good for either the Indiana Pacers or Washington Wizards, as both have a laundry list of inactive players as they open a two-game set in the U.S. Capitol tonight.

It’s a battle between the two worst teams in the East, and my Pacers vs. Wizards predictions and free NBA picks target the Under on Thursday, February 19.

Pacers vs Wizards prediction

Pacers vs Wizards best bet: Under 232.5 (-110)

The Washington Wizards have the second-worst scoring defense in basketball, but the Indiana Pacers aren’t in a position to take advantage.

Pascal Siakam, Ivica Zubac, and Obi Toppin are out, while T.J. McConnell and Aaron Nesmith are questionable. Indiana already ranks third-worst in scoring at 111.1 points per game.

The Wizards can’t capitalize, as Anthony Davis and Trae Young still haven’t debuted, and Alex Sarr is on the shelf.

The Pacers have won six of seven in this head-to-head, but with roster uncertainty, stick to the Under, which has hit in three straight meetings.

Pacers vs Wizards same-game parlay

Andrew Nembhard is one of Indiana's few fully healthy regulars, and he’s been dealing, racking up at least nine dimes in seven of his last 11 games, missing the Over by an assist the other two times.
 
Jarace Walker led the Pacers in scoring with 24 last game against Brooklyn, but his follow-up hasn’t been great: in three previous games where he’s gone for 20+, he’s never scored more than 15 in the next game.

Pacers vs Wizards SGP

  • Under 232.5
  • Andrew Nembhard Over 8.5 assists
  • Jarace Walker Under 17.5 points

Our "from downtown" SGP: Three's a crowd

Let’s stick with this backcourt-frontcourt combo as we round out our big money SGP.

Nembhard’s 2.5 line on made threes is too inflated, considering the most moneyballs he’s ever hit in a game in nine career games vs. the Wiz is one.

Walker, meanwhile, has a gettable 1.5 line. He’s hit at least two triples in 12 of his last 16 games.

Pacers vs Wizards SGP

  • Under 232.5
  • Andrew Nembhard Over 8.5 assists
  • Jarace Walker Under 17.5 points
  • Andrew Nembhard Under 2.5 made threes
  • Jarace Walker Over 1.5 made threes

Pacers vs Wizards odds

  • Spread: Pacers -2.5 (-110) | Wizards +2.5 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Pacers -140 | Wizards +120
  • Over/Under: Over 232.5 (-110) | Under 232.5 (-110)

Pacers vs Wizards betting trend to know

Washington has covered the spread in seven of its last eight home games vs teams with a losing record. Find more NBA betting trends for Pacers vs. Wizards.

How to watch Pacers vs Wizards

LocationCapital One Arena, Washington, D.C.
DateThursday, February 19, 2026
Tip-off7:00 p.m. ET
TVFDSN IN, MNMT

Pacers vs Wizards latest injuries

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Dodgers' $397,500 signing looks like one of MLB's absolute steals

Josue De Paula

Dodgers' $397,500 signing looks like one of MLB's absolute steals originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The Los Angeles Dodgers can outspend everyone in baseball.

But even when they aren't opening their full checkbook for signings, they can still strike gold.

That's what happened with Josue De Paula.

He was a well-regarded prospect in the international class of 2022, but by no means viewed as a future superstar.

The Dodgers got him then for $397,500 out of the Dominican Republic.

Since then, De Paula has developed into one of the best prospects in baseball. MLB.com revisited his rise in a new article on Thursday.

De Paula is now the No. 15 prospect in the entire sport according to MLB Pipeline, the top spot in the Dodgers' system.

"Though he was just 18 and had only reached Single-A entering the 2024 season, De Paula already was drawing raves as the Dodgers' most advanced young hitter since Corey Seager," MLB.com wrote of their thoughts on De Paula from two years ago. "Signed for $397,500 out of the Dominican Republic in 2022, he's now drawing comparisons to a slightly smaller Yordan Alvarez thanks to his combination of swing decisions and exit velocities. At age 20 last year, he ranked second in the pitcher-friendly Midwest League in on-base percentage (.406), OPS (.827) and walks (82)."

MORE: There's one question Pirates phenom Konnor Griffin needs to answer

Wait, so the Dodgers are the Dodgers, and they may have landed a guy compared to one of the best hitters in baseball, Yordan Alvarez, for just $397,500?

The rich get richer, even when they're making shrewd money moves.

The baseball world knows that the Dodgers have incredible scouting and development staffs, too. It's what makes it so hard to keep up with them, because when those pair up with the finances on the high end, they have a feeling of being unstoppable.

More MLB news:

Tiger Woods eyes competitive golf return next week in possible The Masters build-up

Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images
Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images

Anyone worried that Tiger Woods would play it safe and give nothing away in his press conference ahead of the Genesis Invitational got a bit of a surprise on Tuesday. He did not rule out a possible return at the Masters.

Woods has not played competitive golf since 2024. He missed most of the following year with an Achilles injury and later had back surgery.

That did not come up right away during his media appearance, which just shows how much else has happened for him lately.

However, when questioned about the possibility of him skipping this year’s Masters, Woods gave a concise answer: “No.”

Tiger Woods’ TGL appearance next week still a possibility

Photo by Megan Briggs/TGL/TGL via Getty Images
Photo by Megan Briggs/TGL/TGL via Getty Images

Woods mentioned that he is hitting full shots again, but Augusta is a completely different test.

His fitness may become clearer soon. Rex Hoggard suggested on the Golf Channel Podcast that the 15-time major champion could return to TGL by the end of next week.

“Perhaps I’m being too optimistic, maybe I got swept up in it as I’m listening to that 20 minute press conference yesterday. You’re right, he’s the king of the one word answer, and there was a smirk to that. I kind of read it a little bit different. Again, I walked away a little more optimistic than I was, and I think we’ll get an answer sooner rather than later,” Hoggard stated.

“If you look at, and I’m sorry to revert to this because I know it’s not even comparing apples to apples, but his Jupiter Links team is scheduled to play on Sunday night of Cognizant week, so essentially next week, Sunday night, they’re scheduled to play. I think there’s a level of optimism that he might show up there. That might be one of the tells, okay maybe he is ready.

“I know it’s playing a TGL match inside where he’s not walking Augusta. I’m not trying to compare those two things, but it certainly would be an interesting soft opening if the idea is to play The Masters. So we’ll get an answer sooner rather than later. Maybe I’m being overly optimistic, but I walked away thinking to myself it’s a possibility, and I didn’t go into that press conference thinking it was going to be a possibility of that at all.”

Tiger Woods raises hopes for a Masters return but leaves room for doubt

Woods has left the door open to playing at the Masters, but nothing is certain just yet.

The golf world would love to see him back in action. It is always a big moment whenever he steps onto the course these days.

His only real priority is getting himself fit enough to play, but if he was nowhere near ready, he could have just said he is not hitting full shots yet.

Things can change quickly though. He started the 2025 TGL season looking on track to play at Torrey Pines before taking time away following his mother’s death.

He was then hoping to return for Augusta until an Achilles injury put those plans on hold.

It serves as a reminder that even with the best intentions, setbacks can happen quickly. While Woods may be aiming for a Masters comeback, there are still plenty of hurdles between now and then.

Read more:

Final 4 Olympics men’s hockey teams still standing, ranked by gold medal chances

Canada's #93 Mitch Marner celebrates with teammates after scoring his team's fourth goal to win the men's play-off quarter-final ice hockey match between Canada and Czech Republic at the Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games in Milan, on February 18, 2026. Canada wins 4 - 3 against Czech Republic and is qualified for the semi-finals. (Photo by Alexander NEMENOV / AFP via Getty Images) | AFP via Getty Images

Then there were four. The Olympic gold medal in men’s ice hockey will be settled on Sunday in the final event of the Milan games. It’s been a phenomenal tournament that not only showcased the depth of talent in world hockey, but felt more special than it has in years with the addition of NHL talent to the tournament. It allowed the best hockey players in the world to be on display, and potentially even open the door for lesser-known non-NHL players to get a second look from the sport’s biggest league.

As predicted prior to Milan we have Canada and USA in the mix for the gold medal, but this is far from a foregone conclusion. Now we take a look at all four of the remaining teams, what make them tick, and who could be hearing their anthem on the celebratory podium.

4. Finland

This is the most mercurial team remaining in the field. When Finland are on their game they have qualities nobody (not even Canada) can match. They play a supremely pretty, finesse style of hockey that puts a priority on speed and passing over everything else — but that’s also their biggest weakness.

Finland lacks a distinct edge that can carry them through in a grinding, physical game, and a big factor in this has been a lack of aggression or assertion by Mikko Rantanen. He’s playing very good hockey, registering one goal and four assists — but there just hasn’t been the the kind of superstar takeover many would have expected from him in these games, currently sitting at a +1 on the ice. The saving grace is that Finland is deep with four players in the Top 25 in points these games.

If Finland plays to their potential, they are a silver medal caliber team with a chance to even sneak a gold. We still haven’t seen them hit that level yet, and while they have been clicking at times — there just isn’t enough consistency to have supreme faith in them. One shift they’ll look like the best team in the tournament, the next it’s hard to see how they made it this far.

3. Slovakia

Slovakia secured their first medal in team history at the 2022 Winter Olympics, as they returned from Beijing with a bronze medal to their credit.

Another bronze is now in sight after their dominant performance against Germany, but this group could think about setting their sights higher. Pavol Regenda opened the scoring with a goal in the first period, and then Slovakia added three more in the second period to take a 4-1 lead to the second intermission.

Regenda’s second goal of the game staked Slovakia to a 5-1 lead, and they salted away their quarterfinals win over the final 19 minutes of the game.

Heading into knockout play, we wondered if Slovakia would find their edge after an inconsistent run during the preliminaries. They certainly found that edge against Germany, and the team we saw on Tuesday could certainly make some noise here in the semifinals, if not beyond.

2. USA

The United States hasn’t been perfect this tournament, but they have a quality that none of the remaining teams do: An abundance of toughness. These games we saw Canada opt for a more puck-handling, skills-based team with Tom Wilson and Brad Marchand being the only real bruisers on their roster. Meanwhile USA went for a lot more blue collar, two-way, forechecking forwards that don’t have the same offensive upside.

This put Team USA at more of a risk in the opening stages of the tournament, but surviving against another physical team in Sweden puts them in a great spot for a stylistic clash in the semi-finals and beyond. Auston Matthews is the linchpin in the plan, with his high-volume shooting requiring teams to account for him, opening up chances for other scorers to take advantage of the vacuum he creates on the ice.

The other element where Team USA thrives is defense, particularly the ability to ensure teams don’t get clean looks at goal. The defensive unit for the team thrives at playing passing lanes and stopping opportunities, which really shined against Sweden in the quarter finals, who struggled to make the additional pass they wanted to in order to get good looks at goal. Assuming you’re able to get past that wall there’s still Connor Hellebuyck in goal, who might not be in Vezina form this season — but he’s still the best goalie left in the tournament.

There’s a lot to like about Team USA as a gold medal team. They match up well against both the finesse lines of Canada and Finland — either of whom they’d see in the final.

1. Canada

The team that limped through the first period against Czechia could struggle to advance to the gold medal game.

The team that showed up in the second period against Czechia could win gold going away.

After falling down 2-1 against Czechia, Canada poured it on over the next 20 minutes, tying the game on a goal from Nathan MacKinnon, his third goal of the Olympics. But that goal came after a tremendous amount of pressure from the Canadians, who seemed to kick into an extra gear with Connor McDavid — whose assist on MacKinnon’s goal was his second of the game — leading the way.

Then, after Canada went down again midway through the third period, they turned it on again, putting pressure on Czechia and getting a deflection goal from Nick Suzuki to even the game at 3-3. Canada then won the game early in overtime, advancing to the semifinals.

We’ll see which version of Team Canada shows up in their next game: The team that slept through the first period, or the team that turned things up a notch when they needed it versus Czechia. But if it is the latter, that is a team that can absolutely leave Italy with a gold.

Conflicting reports over Hertha prodigy Kennet Eichhorn's future

Conflicting reports over Hertha prodigy Kennet Eichhorn's future
Conflicting reports over Hertha prodigy Kennet Eichhorn's future

Sport Bild reported on Wednesday that 16-year-old Kennet Eichhorn is keen to leave Hertha BSC this summer amid interest from several top clubs.

However, according to Sky Germany, the young midfielder has yet to make a decision on his future, with a stay in the German capital beyond the summer still a possibility.

The report adds that Eichhorn is currently focused on his recovery from a syndesmosis injury in his left foot, with the 16-year-old hoping to return before the end of the season.

Despite his young age, Eichhorn has already made 14 first-team appearances for Hertha's first team.

Islam Makhachev not worried about ‘AliExpress McGregor’ Ian Garry training in Georgia: ‘Zero effect’

INGLEWOOD, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 16: Islam Makhachev of Russia is seen on stage during the UFC 311 press conference at Intuit Dome on January 16, 2025 in Inglewood, California. (Photo by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC)

Welterweight Islam Makhachev is not impressed with Ian Machado Garry’s recent trip to Georgia in preparation for a rumored title fight.

A few months back, Garry said he’d enlist the country of Georgia to help him defeat Makhachev should he get the call to fight the dominant Dagestani grappler. Georgia has churned out a number of top level wrestlers in recent years like Merab Dvalishvili and Arman Tsarukyan. And as promised, Garry is now is Georgia days after reports started leaking that he and Makhachev could fight.

For his part, Makhachev isn’t worried.

“In Georgia, he’ll probably improve in some areas,” Makhachev admitted in an interview with Ushatayka. “But I’ve been wrestling my whole life, not just for two to three months. So I don’t care about that anymore. Throughout all my recent fights, someone brings someone into their camps, they bring in some wrestlers or whatever. Oliveira brought in someone from the Iranian national wrestling team.”

“Zero effect. Don’t waste your time.”

Jack Della Maddalena also brought in Craig Jones, who helped Della Maddalena overcome the wrestling of Belal Muhammad to win the welterweight belt. It wasn’t enough to stop Makhachev from pinning him to the canvas during their fight. Islam clearly expects a similar result with Garry despite any Georgian aid.

Makhachev was also asked if he felt his fight with Garry would be a continuation of the much-hyped Ireland vs. Dagestan rivalry that only really existed during the days of Khabib Nurmagomedov vs. Conor McGregor.

“Like they say: from AliExpress,” Makhachev joked.

There’s still no timeline set for Makhachev’s return (or official confirmation that Garry will be his opponent), but for what it’s worth the reports we’re hearing don’t involve Islam fighting on the big UFC White House card in June.

PREVIEW | Real Sociedad vs Real Oviedo - team news, lineups, predictions

PREVIEW | Real Sociedad vs Real Oviedo - team news, lineups, predictions
PREVIEW | Real Sociedad vs Real Oviedo - team news, lineups, predictions

Real Sociedad and Real Oviedo clash this Saturday at the Reale Arena for round 25 of the La Liga.

Real Sociedad have 31 points to their name this season and occupy 8th position in the table. In their last fixture, Sergio Francisco's team suffered a 4-1 reverse against Real Madrid (La Liga 2025/26).

Real Oviedo have picked up 16 points and currently lie in 20th position. In their last encounter, Luis Carrión's team were beaten 1-2 by Athletic Bilbao (La Liga 2025/26).

The last meeting between the two teams ended with Real Oviedo winning 1-0.

Predicted lineups

Real Sociedad: Álex Remiro, Jon Aramburu, Igor Zubeldía, Jon Martín, Aihen Muñoz, Jon Gorrotxategi, Pablo Marín, Yangel Herrera, Wesley, Carlos Soler, Mikel Oyarzabal

Real Oviedo: Aarón Escandell, Nacho Vidal, Eric Bailly, David Carmo, Javi López, Santi Cazorla, Kwasi Sibo, Haissem Hassan, Alberto Reina, Ilyas Chaira, Federico Viñas

Unavailable

Real Sociedad

Real Oviedo

  • Ovie Ejaria - Muscle Injury

Last starting XIs

Real Sociedad ( vs Real Madrid 2026-02-14): Álex Remiro, Jon Aramburu, Jon Martín, Igor Zubeldía, Aihen Muñoz, Yangel Herrera, Jon Gorrotxategi, Pablo Marín, Carlos Soler, Wesley, Mikel Oyarzabal

Real Oviedo ( vs Athletic Bilbao 2026-02-15): Aarón Escandell, Nacho Vidal, David Carmo, Eric Bailly, Javi López, Santi Colombatto, Kwasi Sibo, Haissem Hassan, Alberto Reina, Ilyas Chaira, Federico Viñas

Did you know...by playmaker stats

MANAGERS

  • Sergio Francisco faced Real Oviedo on one occasion, recording a defeat.

TEAMS

  • Away from home, Real Oviedo currently has one victory in the last 12 games.
  • Away from home, Real Oviedo has conceded goals in 12 consecutive games.
  • Away from home, Real Oviedo has eight consecutive games without a win.
  • Away from home, Real Oviedo has two consecutive defeats.
  • Real Oviedo currently has one victory in the last 17 games.
  • At home, Real Sociedad currently has one loss in the last six games.
  • At home, Real Sociedad has scored in nine consecutive games.
  • At home, Real Sociedad has conceded goals in ten consecutive games.
  • At home, Real Sociedad has five consecutive games without losing.
  • At home, Real Sociedad has three consecutive victories.
  • Real Sociedad currently has one loss in the last 12 games.
  • Real Sociedad has scored in 13 consecutive games.

HEAD TO HEAD

  • Real Sociedad and Real Oviedo have faced each other 74 times, with Real Oviedo having the advantage: 27 victories, against 25 wins for Real Sociedad.
  • At the Reale Arena, Real Sociedad has an advantage in the clashes against Real Oviedo: 20 victories in 37 games. Real Oviedo has seven victories.
  • In the Spanish League, 57 matches have been played between the two teams, with Real Sociedad winning 18, 17 draws, and 22 victories for Real Oviedo.

Lincoln City on the longest unbeaten run of the season

Lincoln City on the longest unbeaten run of the season
Lincoln City on the longest unbeaten run of the season

Lincoln City put four past 10-man Northampton Town on Tuesday night to not only increase the gap over third-place Bolton Wanderers but also extend the record unbeaten streak for this season.

The Imps haven't lost in the league for 89 days, a 3-2 defeat away to Wycombe Wanderers after initially fighting back from two goals down only to lose to Jack Grimmer's effort late on.

Since then Lincoln have gone 15 league games unbeaten, the longest run any team in the top four tiers of English football has managed in the 2025/26 campaign.

In that run, Lincoln have drawn four times while winning the remaining 11, including big wins over Plymouth Argyle and Peterborough United.

The previous longest unbeaten run this campaign before Lincoln's win midweek was set by League Two promotion chasers Cambridge United. The U's managed to go 14 undefeated from November 8th (a goalless draw away to Salford City) until losing on the road against Harrogate Town at the start of this month.

Cambridge's run was also matched this week by any fourth tier side, Bromley. The Ravens began with a 3-1 win at home to Crawley Town at the start of December and on Tuesday they drew 1-1 at home to Cheltenham Town. 

However, Bromley's next game is also away to Harrogate Town... perhaps the Sulphurites stop another 14-game unbeaten run this season.

Only one other team is really close to Lincoln City's 15-game undefeated league streak: League One leaders Cardiff City. The Bluebirds have gone 12 without defeat since a 1-0 win over Exeter City on Boxing Day.

Intriguingly, Cardiff also host Lincoln City on March 7th. Will their respective undefeated streaks still be going by then?

Official – Gianluca Manganiello To Referee Lecce Vs Inter Milan Serie A Clash

Official – Gianluca Manganiello To Referee Lecce Vs Inter Milan Serie A Clash
Official – Gianluca Manganiello To Referee Lecce Vs Inter Milan Serie A Clash

Referee Gianluca Manganiello will be in charge of Saturday’s Serie A clash between Lecce and Inter Milan.

The Lega Serie A have announced the complete list of officials for the weekend, via FCInterNews. Daniele Paterna will be on VAR duty for the match.

Inter Milan suffered a disappointing 3-1 defeat at Bodo/Glimt in midweek Champions League action.

However, the Nerazzurri are leading the way in Serie A, boasting a seven-point lead over second-placed AC Milan.

Furthermore, Cristian Chivu has led his side to six consecutive league wins, including a 3-2 victory over Juventus last weekend.

Meanwhile, Lecce have steered three points clear of 18th-placed Fiorentina on the back of successive league triumphs.

Gianluca Manganiello to Referee Lecce vs Inter Milan Serie A Clash – Paterna On VAR

TORREON, MEXICO – FEBRUARY 19:Picture of the VAR system prior the 9th round match between Santos Laguna and Cruz Azul as part of the Torneo Clausura 2025 Liga MX at Corona Stadium on February 19, 2025 in Torreon, Mexico. (Photo by Manuel Guadarrama/Getty Images)

The referee for Sunday’s game will be Gianluca Manganiello.

Assisting Manganiello in his duties will be Luigi Rossi and Pietro De Giudici.

The role of the fourth official, meanwhile, will fall to Federico Dionisi.

In the VAR booth, Daniele Paterna will oversee the match to correct any errors made by the on-pitch officials.

Assisting Paterna in his duties will be Gianluca Aureliano.

After falling victim to disastrous officiating in several matches this season, Inter will hope to avoid further controversy in this clash.

'India used to fear us': Pakistan's Mohammad Amir, Basit Ali blast Shadab Khan for digs at seniors

NEW DELHI: Mohammad Amir recently compared Pakistan’s current cricket team with the side from the 1990s. He said the respect Pakistan once commanded has faded.

“The Pakistan team in the 90s and the current team has a difference. India used to fear us back then, now they don’t take us seriously anymore. Now, they are not celebrating after taking our wickets and even after winning the match,” Amir said on a Pakistani TV channel.


His comments came after Pakistan lost to India by 61 runs in the T20 World Cup. After that match, Shahid Afridi called for major changes in the team. He said senior players should be dropped because of poor performances.

“If I had to take a decision here, then I would drop Shaheen, Babar and Shadab as well,” Afridi said.

Shadab Khan was unhappy with these remarks. He responded after a strong performance against Namibia, where he scored 36 runs and took three wickets. Pakistan won that match by 102 runs and reached the Super 8.

Shadab reminded former players that they also never beat India in World Cups.

“Our ex-cricketers have their own opinions. They have done well for Pakistan, and at the end of the day, they have also never defeated India in the World Cup,” Shadab said in Colombo.

“We were the ones who defeated India in the 2021 World Cup. In World Cups, we have beaten India only once. Yes, they are legends, but they have never done anything remarkable against India in the World Cup.”

He also said the team should focus on winning the tournament.

“We are talking too much about one match. Yes, the obvious goal was to win that match against India as well. At the end of the day, our main aim is to win the World Cup. We are trusting our process, and we will get the results,” he added.

Former cricketer Basit Ali also criticised Shadab’s comments.

“In my opinion, Shadab Khan should not have said such things about his father-in-law. Saqlain Mushtaq had 10 bowlers like Shadab in his pocket,” Basit said. He also questioned Shadab’s role in the team and his performances.

Basit then shared a past incident from a tour with Pakistan A.

“I am going to reveal something that no one knows. I took the Pakistan A team to England. He used to be on the phone all the time. I had to snatch both his phones.”

Dodgers notes: Dave Roberts, Christian Zazueta, Paul DePodesta

GLENDALE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 17: Dave Roberts #30 of the Los Angeles Dodgers looks on during a workout at Camelback Ranch on February 17, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Ahead of the Dodgers’ first official workout on Tuesday, manager Dave Roberts delivered his annual opening address to the team.

First full squad workout starts with a speech from Doc! #DodgersSTpic.twitter.com/pt1DH3vwM7

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) February 17, 2026

Included during the presentation was asking newcomers Kyle Tucker and Edwin Díaz why they chose the Dodgers. Well, besides the record-setting contractsboth signed.

From Alden González at ESPN:

Their message, Roberts said, centered on the team’s attention to detail, the professionalism with which they play and the way staffers take care of players’ families.

“I think one of our most overarching goals is to be a destination spot,” Dodgers president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman said. “Most important, where our own guys don’t want to leave. But where players from other teams are looking longingly, like, ‘Oh, I want to be on the Dodgers’ — that’s our goal. Because we feel like if we’re able to maintain our really talented players, we’re able to get really talented players from other teams, that obviously will help in our ultimate quest to win World Series.”

Roberts on Tuesday also was a guest on the ESPN Baseball Tonight podcast with Buster Olney, talking about Tucker and Díaz, among other things.

"What's makes a good manager – good players, and we got a lot of good players."

Dodgers manager Dave Roberts on the addition of Edwin Diaz and Kyle Tucker | @Buster_ESPN@ESPNLosAngeleshttps://t.co/LvReHHFmwMpic.twitter.com/HEeWF9Eu8h

— ESPN Podcasts (@espnpodcasts) February 18, 2026

Christian Zazueta last season won the Branch Rickey Award as the Dodgers minor league pitcher of the year, and figures to open his age-21 season with High-A Great Lakes. The right-hander was listed as one of 10 prospects to watch on the backfields this spring in Arizona by Baseball America.

“Zazueta’s fastball has taken a significant step forward alongside his physical development. The heater now sits around 93 mph and climbed as high as 98 in 2025,” wrote Jesús Cano. “The pitch excels because of his lower release height and excellent extension, allowing it to jump on hitters and generate more impact than the radar gun alone might suggest.”

Old friend alert

Former Dodgers general manager and current Colorado Rockies president of baseball operations talked with Renee Dechert at Purple Row about ‘Moneyball,’ which captured his time with the Oakland A’s under Billy Beane.

The whole interview is worth reading, but I particularly enjoyed this answer from DePodesta on on-base percentage, and how it was portrayed in the book (and movie):

It’s funny. There were a lot of things we were doing at that point that went beyond on-base, but it was in our conversations with Michael is probably the best way to express, at least directionally, what it is that we really were doing. We were trying to find value in the game. And at that point in the game, on-base was something that was probably a little undervalued. Now, in the last 20 years, there have been times where it’s been overvalued, and sort of gone through cycles.

Georgia football makes top-5 for elite LB Joakim Gouda

Three-star linebacker recruit Joakim Gouda has announced his top-five schools, per On3’s Hayes Fawcett.

Gouda is an extremely talented defender that has drawn interest from various programs across the SEC. The linebacker currently has Texas, Auburn, Florida, Alabama and Georgia as his top five programs.

Gouda has official visits set with four of his five top schools including Georgia. The elite linebacker plans to visit UGA from May 29-31.

The Bulldogs and coach Kirby Smart will look to emerge as a favorite for the Georgia native. At 6-foot-2, 225-pounds, Gouda could quickly find himself with a significant role on Georgia’s defense in 2027 should he ultimately choose to sign with the Dawgs.

Gouda is ranked as the No. 61 linebacker and the No. 739 overall player from the class of 2027, per the 247Sports Composite rankings. The linebacker is ranked as the No. 82 overall player from Georgia. An attendee of South Paulding High School (Douglasville, Georgia), finds himself drawing serious interest from numerous SEC programs. The Bulldogs also signed four-star offensive tackle Tyreek Jemison in the class of 2026, so Georgia has a connection to Gouda.

Jan 1, 2026; New Orleans, LA, USA; Georgia Bulldogs head coach Kirby Smart arrives prior to the 2025 Sugar Bowl and quarterfinal game of the College Football Playoff against the Mississippi Rebels at Caesars Superdome. Mandatory Credit: Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

The linebacker could quickly begin to make an impact at any program that lands him, as Gouda will continue to narrow down his options in the near future.

Georgia has targeted a multitude of playmakers from the 2027 class, including five-star defensive lineman Marcus Fakatou and four-star safety KJ Caldwell.

Kirby Smart visits Joakim Gouda

Thank you for stopping @KirbySmartUGA !!! #GoDawgs 🐶 pic.twitter.com/prIkFB6ma0

— Joakim “Keem” Gouda ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ (@GoudaJoakim) January 29, 2026

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This article originally appeared on UGA Wire: Elite LB Joakim Gouda names top-5 schools

Should New York Giants make a play for veteran guard Wyatt Teller?

Should the New York Giants consider making a play for veteran guard Wyatt Teller now that he has confirmed he will not return to the Cleveland Browns in 2026?

Teller, a 31-year-old right guard, announced his departure in an emotional Instagram post, thanking Cleveland fans and reflecting on his seven-year tenure after being traded from Buffalo in 2019.

A three-time Pro Bowler (2021-2023) and two-time second-team All-Pro (2020, 2021), Teller has been a cornerstone of the Browns' offensive line, starting 101 of 109 career games. His peak years featured elite run-blocking, earning high regard from analysts.

With the Giants' interior line needing reinforcement—Greg Van Roten is aging and a free agent, while Jon Runyan Jr. could be cut—Teller offers immediate experience and power. A key connection exists: New Giants OL coach Mike Bloomgren coached Teller in Cleveland during the 2025 season, potentially easing integration into the revamped scheme under John Harbaugh.

However, red flags persist. Teller's Pro Football Focus grades have declined sharply (from 92.2 in 2020 to 62.3 in 2025), coinciding with missed time from recurring calf injuries (eight games over the last two seasons) and past reports of attitude concerns. At his age and given the physical wear and tear of the position, a multi-year deal carries risk.

Still, on a reasonable contract—market value around $10 million annually—Teller could provide a significant upgrade and fresh start. The Giants must weigh his upside against the concerns to bolster protection for their quarterback.

This article originally appeared on Giants Wire: Should New York Giants make a play for veteran guard Wyatt Teller?

Chris Paul reflects on vetoed trade that would've sent him to Lakers

Coming out of the 2011 NBA lockout, the Los Angeles Lakers had an aging team that they wanted to replenish. They had won it all in 2009 and 2010, but in 2011, they got swept in the second round of the playoffs by the Dallas Mavericks, and their roster seemed to be getting stale.

In December 2011, they put together a trade that would've brought them Chris Paul, who was then 26 years of age and early in his prime, from the New Orleans Hornets. But the trade was vetoed by then-NBA commissioner David Stern, who was the acting owner of the Hornets at the time, and Paul ended up with the Los Angeles Clippers instead. It was a stinging decision for Lakers fans, who were starting to dream about an all-world backcourt of Paul and Kobe Bryant.

Paul could've helped Bryant age more gracefully and won at least one ring with the Black Mamba. Instead, he announced his retirement last week after 21 seasons and zero championships.

The future Hall of Fame point guard made an appearance on TheTylilShow, and one of the topics discussed was that vetoed trade. He gave his recollection of how it all went down (h/t Total Pro Sports).

“Once the lockout ended and we went back to our teams, I got traded to the Lakers. At the time my team was owned by the NBA. The owner of my team ran out of money. So the NBA took over my team. The NBA was making decisions for my team….

“Next thing you know, the league receded it. I was excited. They said be ready to play the whole year back here and then it was quiet. What happened was a few of the owners of the other teams said we just came out of a lockout and did a new CBA, they said we was all about competitive balance.”

Plenty of Lakers fans have long believed that Stern vetoed the trade because he was pressured by other team owners over the lack of competitive balance it would've created. At the time, the Miami Heat had already added a young LeBron James and Chris Bosh to Dwyane Wade, while the Boston Celtics continued to field a team that had at least three future Hall of Famers.

For the Lakers, the fallout from that vetoed deal was damaging. Reigning Sixth Man of the Year Lamar Odom was inconsolable after being included in the failed trade for Paul, and he was jettisoned to the Dallas Mavericks shortly afterward. They ended up acquiring Steve Nash and Dwight Howard in 2012, giving them what looked like a superteam, but it wasn't meant to be, as a gnarly rash of injuries resulted in a first-round playoff sweep.

As it turned out, Paul made just one trip to the NBA Finals in 2021 with the Phoenix Suns. The Suns won the first two games of that series before Giannis Antetokounmpo imposed his will and led the Milwaukee Bucks to four straight wins afterward.

This article originally appeared on LeBron Wire: Chris Paul reflects on vetoed trade that would've sent him to Lakers

Chiefs DL Chris Jones responds to ex-NFL GM's opinion of Travis Kelce

The countdown to free agency is underway, with the Kansas City Chiefs front office looking to make a splash with the hopeful return of their Pro Bowl tight end. The Chiefs' desire, however, isn't echoed by a former NFL general manager.

During Wednesday's SportsCenter show, ESPN Insider and former front office executive Mike Tannenbaum shared his thoughts on how he would handle Travis Kelce this offseason.

"I would move on from Travis Kelce," Tannenbaum said. "When you're in the front office, you have to project what a player is going to do, not what they've done. Travis Kelce is a first ballot Hall of Famer, but when you watch him and make an honest and sober evaluation of his 2025 performance, clearly his best days are behind him."

The comment wasn't received well by fans on social media and was dismissed immediately by Chiefs Pro Bowl defensive lineman Chris Jones. A simple 'Shut Up' was all that was needed in his repost of the video clip, which captured thousands of views.

Shut up…..🤫 https://t.co/6PhxaIzIRW

— Chris Jones (@StoneColdJones) February 19, 2026

Kelce led the Chiefs in yards with 851, receptions with 78, and targets, and had five touchdowns. For the second consecutive year, he had the most fan votes for his eleventh career Pro Bowl selection.

The three-time Super Bowl champion tied with Jason Witten for the second-most Pro Bowl selections among tight ends all-time, trailing only Pro Football Hall of Famer and Chiefs legend Tony Gonzalez.

This article originally appeared on Chiefs Wire: Chiefs DL Chris Jones responds to ex-NFL GM's opinion of Travis Kelce

Evaluating Clemson football's newest recruits: CB Shavar Young Jr

This is a series where the Clemson Wire will evaluate the 2026 football recruiting class. Here, we will review the very first commit of the class, CB Shavar Young Jr.

Standing at 6'0 and 180 pounds, Shavar Young Jr. is a dynamic two-way defensive back out of Webb School of Knoxville in Tennessee who brings competitive edge, versatility, and true playmaking upside to Clemson’s secondary.Main Takeaway: Shavar Young Jr. is not just Clemson’s first commit in the 2026 class. He is a tone setter. A competitor with elite ball skills, offensive instincts, and proven production who has the tools to outplay his ranking and become a difference maker in the secondary.

"It felt really good to get the offer. It means a lot to me because it's an offer from Clemson. It meant something"Shavar Young Jr

Young’s profile is rooted in versatility and volume. Few high school prospects in the country can claim legitimate production on offense, defense, and special teams while also serving as a two-time team captain. At Webb, Young was asked to be everything for his team. Ball carrier, receiver, defensive playmaker, returner, leader. That level of responsibility matters when projecting a player to the college level, especially at a position as demanding as cornerback.

He arrives at Clemson as a corner, but with a broad athletic background. In addition to football, Young was a key contributor to Webb’s state championship basketball team as a junior, further reinforcing the multi-sport foundation that Clemson’s staff has historically valued. The combination of football workload and basketball experience points to an athlete who is accustomed to playing fast, reacting quickly, and handling extended minutes in competitive environments.

Young’s portfolio speaks for itself. Over his final two seasons, he totaled 121 tackles, 12 pass breakups, four forced fumbles, and three interceptions, while also producing more than 3,600 yards from scrimmage on offense. Those numbers show a player who consistently finds himself around the football regardless of which side of the ball he lines up on.

Rather than entering college labeled as a finished product, Young projects as a developmental corner with high functional upside. His offensive workload and return experience suggest comfort with the ball in his hands and an ability to operate in space. His defensive production shows a player who can locate the football and contribute in multiple phases while his technique continues to be refined.

Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney has described Young as dynamic and a competitor, two words that align closely with his usage history. Young has repeatedly been placed in roles that require trust, toughness, and consistency.

Early in his Clemson career, the most realistic path to the field likely comes through special teams and depth development. His return background and tackling numbers give him a chance to carve out a role while refining cornerback technique within Clemson’s system. Long term, Young profiles as a versatile defensive back who could provide value both outside and potentially in sub packages depending on how his frame and skill set continue to develop.

NFL Comparison: Andrew Mukuba of the Philadelphia Eagles

Shavar Young Jr. projects as a high-instinct "cover safety" and slot specialist in the mold of Andrew Mukuba. Like Mukuba, Young’s value lies in his rare ability to check all the boxes, possessing the natural ball skills of a 3,600-yard offensive playmaker with the "Eagles brand" of physical mentality required to record 121 tackles in two seasons. While critics may point to his 6'0", 180-pound frame as being "short and light," his basketball-bred coordination and elite reactive quickness allow him to play much bigger than his measurements.

PFF ranks two Clemson transfers amongst the top players in the nation https://t.co/V53k1x8tRhpic.twitter.com/jSAqxM54mO

— Clemson Wire (@Clemson_Wire) February 18, 2026

This comparison is particularly sharp because it mirrors Young's likely career arc at Clemson. He enters the program as a dynamic athlete who can play over the slot, roam the middle of the field, and impact special teams immediately. Much like Mukuba’s transition from a versatile high school star to a foundational "chess piece" in the secondary, Young’s offensive instincts and aggressive tackling style project him as a versatile defensive back who provides modern NFL defenses with the specific "cover safety" utility that is increasingly hard to find.

Contact us @Clemson_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook for ongoing coverage of Clemson Tigers news and notes, plus opinions.

This article originally appeared on Clemson Wire: Reviewing Clemson football recruit defensive back Shavar Young Jr

Will Oregon MBB ever win Big Ten title? Jon Rothstein says no

It's no secret that the Oregon Ducks have struggled mightily this season for a variety of reasons. To kickoff the season, they came away with four hard-fought home victories against... Hawaii, Rice, South Dakota State and Oregon State — not exactly a murderers row of opponents. It wasn't a good sign for a team that had hopes of competing in the Big Ten, and the concerns soon turned into reality coupled with the injury bug hitting the team extremely hard.

Point guard Jackson Shelstad is likely out for the season after playing in just 12 games while center Nate Bittle missed nearly a month with a foot injury and had to be removed from several games before sitting for an extended period of time. Several other reserves have also suffered injury, weakening an already depth-less team.

The Ducks currently hold a 2-13 conference record and have gone just 9-17 overall, easily the program's worst season in recent history.

With Oregon basketball in the doldrums this season, CBS Sports' Jon Rothstein made an off-the-wall claim about the program and three other West Coast teams in the Big Ten.

"The four Big Ten teams from the West Coast --- Oregon, Washington, UCLA, and USC --- are a combined 6-19 in Big Ten games this season outside of the Pacific Time Zone," Rothstein wrote in a post on X. "None of these four programs will ever win a Big Ten regular season title."

The four Big Ten teams from the West Coast --- Oregon, Washington, UCLA, and USC --- are a combined 6-19 in Big Ten games this season outside of the Pacific Time Zone.

None of these four programs will ever win a Big Ten regular season title.

— Jon Rothstein (@JonRothstein) February 18, 2026

The wild take of those four teams never winning the Big Ten is certainly something, considering it's just the second season that the teams have been apart of the conference since departing from the PAC-12.

Last season, the Ducks went 4-3 in Big Ten play outside of the Pacific Time Zone, not an outstanding mark but one that could win the regular season title if they went undefeated in every other conference matchup. Rothstein's claim is one that certainly has merit when looking at this season, but not one that should be concluded with saying it will never happen.

Injuries and lack of talent land way higher on the list of Oregon's problems this season than traveling outside of the Pacific Time Zone. For instance, a skeleton crew of Ducks competed at Purdue — considered by many to be the toughest place to play in the Big Ten — and held a lead in the final minutes before a Boilermakers flurry led to a four-point Purdue victory. The time zone clearly didn't play a factor there.

Even coaching can be considered to be higher on the list of problems, as Dana Altman hasn't been able to figure out many consistant lineups and hasn't gotten the most out of Chinese transfer Wei Lin, who appeared poised for a big season but his confidence was quickly shot down after being benched in multiple games by Altman.

All things 2025-26 season aside, the Ducks showed last season, when they had a formidable roster and weren't repeatedly suffering injuries, that they can compete for regular season Big Ten titles regardless of their location on the West Coast.

Contact/Follow @Ducks_Wire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oregon Ducks news, notes, and opinions.

This article originally appeared on Ducks Wire: College Basketball analyst not high on Oregon Ducks' Big Ten future

Riviera Country Club to host 2 majors, Olympics over next five years

Famed Riviera Country Club is the annual host for the Genesis Invitational on the PGA Tour, except for a one-off at Torrey Pines due to the 2025 wildfires in Los Angeles. It returned in 2026, a year that will also see the iconic course host a women's major for the first time.

Riviera is a classic course that is a favorite among pretty much everyone on Tour, as well as those lucky enough to play the private club. The golf course measures 7,383 yards and will play as a par 71. Architectural credit goes to G.C.Thomas, Jr. and W.P. Bell.

Riviera Country Club ranks third in the state of California in the latest Golfweek's Best 2025: Top private golf courses in every state list. It also checks in at No. 17 on the Golfweek's Best 2025: Top 200 Classic Courses in the U.S. list.

Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California. (Photo: Golfweek)

Previous championships at Riviera Country Club

  • 1995 PGA Championship
  • 1983 PGA Championship
  • 1948 U.S. Open
  • 2012 NCAA Division I Men's Golf Championship

Future championships at Riviera Country Club

2026 U.S. Women's Open

The 18th green at Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, California. (Photo: Cliff Hawkins/Getty Images)

In 2026, the club will celebrate its 100th year and one big way to commemorate a nice, round number like that will be with the playing of the U.S. Women's Open, the first women's championship to be held there.

"We always sought majors," Megan Watanabe, the first female president of the club, told the Associated Press. Her family bought the property in 1989. "Because we never hosted a women's championship, it made sense. Also for the Olympics. I wanted the women to be comfortable and experience Riviera before the Olympics."

2028 Olympics

Speaking of the Olympics, the men's and women's golf competitions will be held at Riv in 2028, when the city of Los Angeles hosts the Summer Games for a third time. It'll be the fourth playing of golf since the sport was brought back to the Olympics in 2016. Riviera was announced as host in 2017.

The gallery at the 18th hole watches the third round of the 2024 Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club.

2031 U.S. Open

Just after the 2023 U.S. Open was played at Los Angeles Country Club, the U.S. Golf Association announced plans to return to Southern California.

Eighty-three years after Ben Hogan won a U.S. Open at Riviera, the men's national championship returns to the storied venue.

The 2031 U.S. Open will be the fifth USGA championship held at the club. Riviera has also hosted the 1998 U.S. Senior Open and the 2017 U.S. Amateur.

This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Riviera Country Club to host 2 majors, Olympics in the next five years

ESPN says Broncos are ‘best fit’ for this free agent running back

The Denver Broncos, along with the rest of the NFL, are now pivoting toward free agency and NFL draft preparation. With the impending free agency of J.K. Dobbins, the Broncos may look to continue building their offense around a stout and veteran running back.

According to ESPN.com writer Matt Bowen, the Broncos should place a bid on Carolina Panthers running back Rico Dowdle. The 27-year-old running back is fresh off another career season, rushing for back-to-back one thousand yard seasons and posting a career high in rushing touchdowns (six).

"Dowdle would step in for free agent J.K. Dobbins to pair with RJ Harvey in Denver's backfield," Bowen wrote for ESPN.com. "In this scenario, Dowdle would split touches with Harvey, and his decisive, downhill running style works on the goal line in coach Sean Payton's offense. Dowdle rushed for 1,076 yards and had 26 carries of 10 or more yards last season with the Panthers."

With the Broncos just four points away from going to the Super Bowl, head coach Sean Payton may be looking to upgrade anyway possible. Dowdle could be a great start, and Bowen believes the running back would be a perfect fit for Denver's offense.

Social: Follow Broncos Wire on Facebook and Twitter/XDid you knowThese 25 celebrities are Broncos fans.

This article originally appeared on Broncos Wire: NFL free agency: Broncos are ‘best fit’ for RB Rico Dowdle

Alysa Liu, her father Arthur and Chinese spies: Unusual road to Olympics

MILAN — Millions of people will watch Alysa Liu when the 20-year-old U.S. figure skater competes for a medal at the 2026 Winter Olympics. Can that be any more unnerving than being watched by Chinese spies?

In 2022, the U.S. Justice Department charged five men with acting on behalf of the Chinese government and targeting Chinese dissidents in the United States. The dissidents included Liu’s father, Arthur, who organized pro-Democracy protests in China before fleeing the country in 1989. And, according to her father, Alysa Liu was targeted too.

"In a weird way, I was like, 'Am I in some prank show? Is this world real?" Alysa Liu said in October while discussing the matter at a Team USA media event in New York.

More: Alysa Liu doesn't 'need' to win Olympic medal. But America needs her to

A man who claimed to be a US. Olympic official called Arthur Liu three months before Alysa Liu competed in the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing, he told USA TODAY Sports, and asked for faxed copies of their passports. Arthur Liu refused.

"I felt something fishy was going on," he told the Associated Press in 2022.

Prosecutors said Matthew Ziburis, one of the five men arrested as a result of the investigation, was hired to perform surveillance on the Liu family, according to PBS.

In the criminal complaint filed by the Department of Justice, Arthur Liu told USA TODAY Sports, he is listed as "Dissident 3" and Alysa Liu is listed as "family member." The Department of Justice did not respond to a USA Today Sports' request for information.

Arthur Liu, father of Alysa Liu (24) of the United States looks on in the women's figure skating short program during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Ice Skating Arena.

Alysa Liu finished sixth at the 2022 Beijing Games and is in third place at the Milano Cortina Winter Games headed into the long program Thursday, Feb. 19, with her father's history part of her own history.

"I mean, it made sense to me from everything my dad did," Alysa Liu said in October of the Chinese spies.

Outrage after a massacre

Arthur said he’ll be traveling to the 2026 Winter Olympics with a group of 26 relatives and friends. There was a time where the only objective of travel was to maintain his safety.

In emails sent to USA TODAY Sports, Arthur described activities he said put him in danger.

In July 1989, Arthur said, he learned he was on a "most wanted" list in Guangzhou while attending the Zhongshan University. He had organized a half dozen demonstrations and hunger strikes to promote democracy, freedom and the rule of law in coordination with the students’ protests in Beijing.

The flashpoint was Tiananmen Square, where hundreds of students and residents in Beijing were killed by the military.

"I was outraged!" Arthur wrote. "How could the People’s Liberation Army use its force against its own students and residents of Beijing? I organized another protest."

He was summoned to report to the Office of Chinese Communist Party Youth League, Arthur wrote.

"The secretary and his colleague interrogated me several times," he wrote. "I told them that the students are all patriotic and wanted the best for China.

"I refused to provide them any more names of students who had participated in the organization of the demonstrations. … I was going to take full responsibility for everything that had happened since at one time I was elected the President of the Guangzhou Autonomous Student Union of Universities. 

“Going to prison for me was a matter of time."

Arthur said he was being followed by police and thought jail was inevitable. But one night, he wrote, a man he knew took him to a small harbor.

Bright lights, paradise on earth

It was 9 p.m. on a summer night in 1989, Arthur Liu wrote, when the boat arrived at a harbor in China.

The man who took Liu to the harbor thought he should leave the country, Liu wrote. Escaping to Hong Kong from China was criminally punishable up to three years in prison or a labor camp, according to Liu.

"We got on the boat and he took off so quick that the four of us had to hold on to the boat so tight that a muscle on my chest area was painfully torn," he wrote. "The boat was skimming on top of the ocean leaving huge waves behind us.

"I was told that this boat is faster than the boats the military and border (patrol) used to chase smugglers so that they won’t be caught. The smuggling business was booming between mainland China and Hong Kong in that era. Goods and people!"

To avoid the military, Arthur Liu wrote, the boat first headed into the ocean, public sea, and then turned toward Hong Kong. About two hours later, according to Liu, the boat pulled near the shore.

"The colorful bright lights on thousands of giant tall buildings were eye blinding," he wrote. "So many of them! So grand in scale! I felt I had arrived in paradise on earth.

"We got off the boat and stepped onto the land of freedom!"

Arthur eventually left Hong Kong and settled in northern California, where he earned a law degree from Hastings College, started his own law firm and his own family.

He is a single father of five children, the eldest being Alysa, who said over the years she's continued to learned about her father’s personal history — in some cases from family members.

"And then my best friend's parents, they knew about it," she said. "So they would tell my best friend the stories and my best friend would report it back to me and be like, 'Did you know this?' And I'd be like, 'What?'"

In October, prompted by a reporter, Alysa Liu mused about what being spied on would look like as a movie.

"They got to make me look like a super cool hero or something," she said. "I can't just be the kid that got spied on and did nothing about it.

"But honestly, I would just have the main focus be my dad's story because his story is so cool."

She cited her father’s persistence. “And he’s brave too," she added.

But now the story is focused on Alysa, who started skating at age 5.

"She just took off on the ice," Arthur Liu said. “She was just chasing adults, hockey players, and making friends and with adults and girls of her own age, boys of her own age. She was just having so much fun on the ice."

She’ll be competing at the Olympics with dark hair dyed with platinum stripes.

"She's a really creative young lady and full of ideas and imagination," Arthur Liu said. "I don't know where that came from. I'm very pragmatic. I'm down to earth. I'm just step-by-step things and stuff like that.

"But she's very creative. She loves photography and some of her pictures, photos, I saw some of them, they are really creative. They were really beautiful and they really catch the moment."

Now, on the world’s stage, the moment belongs to both of them.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Alysa Liu, her father Arthur and Chinese spies: Unusual road to Olympics

Boston Celtics jersey history No. 88 -- Antoine Walker (2005)

The Boston Celtics have had players suiting up in a total of 68 different jersey numbers (and have three others not part of any numerical series) since their founding at the dawn of the Basketball Association of America (BAA – the league that would become today's NBA), worn by well over 500 players in the course of Celtics history.

8 Feb 1997: Forward Antoine Walker of the Boston Celtics stands on the court before the NBA All-Star Rookie Game at the Gund Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. Mandatory Credit: Brian Bahr /Allsport

To commemorate the players who wore those numbers, Celtics Wire is covering the entire history of jersey numbers and the players who sported them since the founding of the team.

With 25 of those jerseys now retired to honor some of the greatest Celtics to wear those jerseys, there is a lot of history to cover.

And for today's article, we will continue with the first of two to wear the No. 88, forward alum Antoine Walker. After ending his college career at the University of Kentucky, Walker was picked up with the sixth overall selection of the 1996 NBA Draft by the Celtics.

The Chicago, Illinois native played the first seven seasons of his pro career with Boston before he was traded to the Dallas Mavericks in 2023. He returned to the team in 2005 via trade from the Atlanta Hawks in 2005, only to be dealt again that summer to the Miami Heat.

During his time suiting up for the Celtics, Walker wore only jersey Nos. 88 and 8, and put up 20.6 points, 8.7 rebounds, 4.1 assists, and 1.5 steals per game.

All stats and data courtesy of Basketball Reference.

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This article originally appeared on Celtics Wire: Celtics jersey history No. 88 -- Antoine Walker (2005)

UFC Houston full fight: Watch Dan Ige's most recent brutal win

The road hasn't been that smooth the past few years for Dan Ige, but when he's on, he's on.

After a five-fight winning streak had him in featherweight contention, Ige has gone 5-8 in an up-and-down run. His most recent win, though, was a brutal finish of fellow longtime fighter Sean Woodson.

Ige (19-10 MMA, 11-9 UFC) returns Saturday to take on Melquizael Costa (25-7 MMA, 6-2 UFC) on the UFC Fight Night 267 main card at Toyota Center in Houston. Ahead of that bout, check out his win over Woodson above.

This article originally appeared on MMA Junkie: UFC Houston full fight: Watch Dan Ige's most recent brutal win

Ex-pro golfer reveals bra size that made her famous — and whether they’re real

merican golfer Paige Spiranac arrives for the 2018 ESPYS at Microsoft Theatre.

Ex-pro golfer reveals bra size that made her famous — and whether they’re real originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Former professional golfer Paige Spiranac knows what to play up when making the golf content that has made her a wildly successful influencer.

Think tight tops, risky little outfits, and a whole lot of slow-motion golf swings.

And in a Wednesday, February 18 video posted to X (formerly Twitter), she revealed her actual bra size — and if they’re real. “So there’s been some pretty crazy headlines that I've seen about myself,” she says to start the video. “And I thought that we could go through some of them.”

One regarded her bra size, which she didn’t have a problem with.

As the (partially false) headline flashed above her head reading, “Paige Spiranac says her 34DD breasts are real — and might even help her golf game,” she says, “Yeah, I mean, it doesn't help my golf game. They just really get in the way of anything. And now we're moving on.”

Another falsity (which she sarcastically called a “beauty”): “Instagram golf star: My boobs are too much for LPGA.” Her comment? “Things I never said: that.”

And the one misleading headline she called “one is one of my all-time favorites”? “Why Page Spiranac doesn't wear underwear on the golf course.” She explained that it came out of a Q&A where she was asked what she wears under her golf skirts. “I said that I wear athletic shorts,” she explains in the video. “And this was the headline that followed.”

The most outrageous headlines lol pic.twitter.com/YJYtRAl9TQ

— Paige Spiranac (@PaigeSpiranac) February 19, 2026


MORE PAIGE: Ex pro golfer flaunts tiny waist in sexy all-white outfit

MORE PAIGE: SI Swim revisits ex pro golfer’s play in skin-tight, backless bodysuit

Spiranac, 32, went pro for about one year in 2015. She has since become a highly-successful influencer (with more than 4 million followers on Instagram alone) and content creator, with much of her work touching on a golf theme.

She most recently played in the Internet Invitational.

READ MORE!

Honoring the Niners Greats: Bryant Young

When fans talk about one of the most respected defensive players in 49ers history, Bryant Young often stands out as a model of consistency, toughness, and leadership.

Across a 14-year career with the San Francisco 49ers, Young built a reputation as one of the most dependable interior defensive linemen in the National Football League, earning admiration not only for his production but also for his professionalism.

Leadership. Dominance. Toughness.

Bryant Young embodies everything it means to be a 49ers Hall of Famer. pic.twitter.com/c39fKR70hB

— San Francisco 49ers (@49ers) June 24, 2020

Before entering the NFL, Young developed into a standout defender with the Notre Dame Fighting Irish.

Known for his strength, technique, and relentless motor, he became one of the nation’s most respected defensive linemen.

That foundation prepared him well for the professional level when San Francisco selected him seventh overall in the 1994 NFL Draft.

Young made an immediate impact as a rookie, contributing to a dominant defense that helped propel the 49ers to victory in Super Bowl XXIX.

While still early in his career, his ability to control the line of scrimmage and disrupt opposing offenses gave the team a strong defensive presence during an era often remembered for offensive firepower.

Another @49ers great is headed to Canton. Bryant Young built a reputation as one of the greatest three-technique defensive tackles ever. @Bgr8t

📺: #PFHOF22 Enshrinement – Saturday 12pm ET on @NFLNetworkpic.twitter.com/8o0PtR6wqJ

— NFL (@NFL) August 4, 2022

What separated Young from many defensive tackles was his balance of power, quickness, and technique.

He consistently collapsed pockets, stuffed running lanes, and freed teammates to make plays.

Though not always the most statistically flashy player, his influence was evident in the stability he brought to the defensive front year after year.

One of the defining chapters of Young’s career came in 1998 when he suffered a devastating leg injury that could have ended his playing days.

Instead, he returned the following season with remarkable determination, eventually earning Comeback Player of the Year honors.

That resilience elevated his standing in the locker room and reinforced his reputation as one of the league’s toughest competitors.

Over time, Young evolved into a team leader, mentoring younger players while maintaining a high personal standard.

Coaches and teammates frequently praised his preparation, humility, and commitment to team success.

Those qualities helped sustain defensive competitiveness even as the roster underwent transitions.

Congrats to Bryant Young for making it into the HOF. Bryant is the #49ers’ all-time sack leader with 89.5, a 4x Pro Bowler and was 1st team All-Pro in 1996. pic.twitter.com/P1x6tylG3w

— Coach Yac 🗣 (@Coach_Yac) February 11, 2022

By the time he retired in 2007, Young had accumulated over 650 tackles, nearly 90 sacks, and four Pro Bowl selections.

More importantly, he left behind a legacy defined by reliability and quiet excellence rather than self-promotion.

His contributions were ultimately recognized with induction into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, a fitting honor for a player whose impact often extended beyond statistics.

Young represented the kind of foundational presence championship teams depend on: steady, disciplined, and relentlessly committed.

For 49ers fans, Bryant Young remains a symbol of durability, perseverance, and understated greatness, a defensive anchor whose influence helped shape multiple eras of San Francisco football.

Is Joel Embiid playing tonight vs. Hawks? Final status for 76ers star

Is Joel Embiid playing tonight vs. Hawks? Final status for 76ers star originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The Philadelphia 76ers will be looking to snap a two-game losing streak when they return to game action after the All-Star Break at home against the Atlanta Hawks on Thursday night.

Unfortunately, the Sixers will be missing a key contributor for the contest.  

Joel Embiid ruled out vs. Hawks due to right knee injury management, shin soreness 

Star center Joel Embiid has been ruled out for the game against Atlanta due to right knee injury management and right shin soreness, which is a new ailment for Embiid. 

Embiid missed Philadelphia's last two games prior to the All-Star break due to some soreness in his right knee, and while working out over the break he also started to experience the shin soreness.

While not an ideal development, obviously, it's also not time to panic for Sixers fans. Embiid was out on the practice floor on Wednesday, and the team is hoping that he will be able to return to game action in short order. 

In the meantime, the Sixers will have to rely on the dynamic guard duo of Tyrese Maxey and V.J. Edgecombe to get the job done against Atlanta. 

The matchup will be the third of the season between Philly and Atlanta. The Hawks won both of the previous two meetings – one in November and one in December. The teams will also meet again one more time in Atlanta in March. 

More Philadelphia 76ers news

9 NBA teams who can win the 2026 Finals, ranked by their championship chances

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - FEBRUARY 09: Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons brings the ball down the court during the first half of a basketball game against the Charlotte Hornets at Spectrum Center on February 09, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by David Jensen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The NBA All-Star break isn’t really the halfway point in the season, but rather a notice to contenders around the league that it’s time to get serious. About 65 percent of the 2025-2026 regular season is already over, and there’s only about eight weeks until the playoffs start. March Madness might be the next big event on the sports calendar, but the playoffs will be here before you know it, and there’s already an inner and outer circle of contenders forming.

The NBA Playoffs are becoming increasingly harder to predict. No one would have anticipated the Indiana Pacers making the NBA Finals as a No. 4 seed last year, and it was even harder to believe that they pushed the Thunder to Game 7 before Tyrese Haliburton tore his Achilles. The Dallas Mavericks also made a shocking Finals run in 2024 as the No. 5 seed in the West. In 2023, the Miami Heat became the first No. 8 seed to ever make the Finals.

Will the league get another big upset this year? It’s on the table with how shaky even the top contenders have looked lately. Here are the nine teams that can win the 2026 NBA championship, ranked by who’s most likely to do it.

9. Houston Rockets

It sure doesn’t feel like the Rockets deserve a spot on this list right now given their recent play and ongoing injury issues, but they’ve been good enough since the start to the season to at least earn a mention. Houston still grades out well statistically exiting the All-Star break at No. 6 in offense, No. 5 in defense, and No. 6 in net-rating. Losing Steven Adams to a season-ending ankle injury just feels like a crushing blow that takes away from the Rockets’ identity of owning the glass and generating extra possessions. This team could really use a healthy Fred VanVleet right now with Reed Sheppard still not fully trusted by Ime Udokda, but that’s not happening. The Kevin Durant burner scandal is a potential distraction in the locker room if it’s true, but the bigger issue is that this team is still dead-last in three-point rate and can’t afford any kind of off-night with the limited number of threes they do generate. We’ve seen some Cinderella runs to the Finals in recent years as noted in the intro, and to me the Rockets still feel better than whoever the fifth-best East team is (Sixers?) or another West challenger like the Lakers.

8. Cleveland Cavaliers

The Cavs entered the season as one of two favorites to win the East along with the Knicks. They never really looked like an NBA Finals contender as injuries hit Darius Garland and Max Strus, plus the loss of Ty Jerome took a toll on what was an elite offense that helped the team win 64 games last year. The Cavs had to act like a desperate team at the deadline if they really wanted to regain their contender status, and that’s exactly what they did. Trading Garland for James Harden is a true stunner that breaks a golden rule in sports to never trade young for old. In this case, the older player is far more durable, but it’s still difficult to trust Harden in big moments given his playoff history. Harden wasn’t the only new addition at the deadline, with Keon Ellis and Dennis Schroder also arriving via the Kings to fortify what was a shaky bench. The Cavs fundamentally changed their team at the trade deadline more than any other contender, and putting them on this list so early in the Harden era is an acknowledgement that: a) they got better, b) the East really is wide open. With Donovan Mitchell playing as well as any guard in the world this side of SGA and Jarrett Allen potentially getting a big boost from Harden’s playmaking, Cleveland is suddenly a lot more interesting now than they were a few weeks ago. I’ll believe Harden can have the signature playoff run he’s always been missing when I see it, but on this team he doesn’t have to do the heavy lifting, just give them what Garland couldn’t in terms of reliability.

7. Boston Celtics

I really thought the Celtics would use Jayson Tatum’s torn Achilles as an excuse to take a gap year and try to land an elite young talent in the 2026 NBA Draft. After flirting with the idea for the first 20 games of the season, Boston took off and has been one of the best teams in the East ever since. Jaylen Brown has shined in a starring role without Tatum, putting together an All-NBA caliber season largely because he’s on fire as a mid-range shooter. Derrick White might be Boston’s real MVP so far, thriving in every way a great role player can thrive despite having a poor shooting season. Boston has discovered a few gems along the way, most notably in Neemias Queta, who has stabilized the front court with elite rebounding and play-finishing. Jordan Walsh and Hugo Gonzalez have also been critical bench pieces who defend and positively influence the possession game, while Nikola Vucevic came over at the trade deadline to add a stretch five look. If Tatum returns, he won’t have to do quite as much dirty work on this team as he’s accustomed to. How Brown and Tatum manage the scoring and creation burden will be interesting to watch, but it could be a good problem to have. The Celtics are once again super well coached, play their analytic-friendly style to a tee, and have a top-10 defense to fall back on. This team can absolutely win the East if Tatum looks anything like Tatum.

6. Minnesota Timberwolves

The Timberwolves reached the Western Conference Finals the last two seasons, and they will be a factor deep into the playoffs again this year. Anthony Edward is one of the best guards alive at age-24, and this season he’s debuted an improved mid-range game to go along with his deadly three-point shooting and ferocious rim-attacking. Edwards has a team full of long and athletic defenders behind him, starting with Rudy Gobert and Jaden McDaniels. Gobert remains a plus-minus monster (+8 net-rating) because of his elite rim protection, and at this point it’s clear that Minnesota’s bold trade for him was a big win. The Wolves didn’t land Giannis at the trade deadline, but they did acquire Ayo Dosunmu, who does a lot to fill the void left by Nickeil Alexander-Walker when he departed in free agency. Dosunmu and Donte DiVincenzo need to hit shots when they’re on the floor, because otherwise it’s on Edwards to keep the team’s three-point rate alive. I’d love to see Edwards on a team with more spacing, but that’s the cost of a phenomenal defense helmed by Gobert. I’d probably pick the Wolves to win the East this year, but sadly for them, they remain in the West until expansion comes. There are other West teams I trust more than Minnesota, but they still have an outside shot at finally breaking through this year.

5. New York Knicks

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: the Knicks’ offense is awesome, but there’s reason to believe their defense isn’t built for the playoffs. New York had a similar problem last season, and firing Tom Thibodeau for Mike Brown hasn’t really solved things. It’s mostly the product of a highly talented but flawed roster-building product that put two of the league’s worst defenders (at least among offensive stars) together to start and close games. Jalen Brunson is a savant and a hero on his best days, but he’s also an 8th percentile defender by EPM who just doesn’t have the length and quickness to toughen up at the point of attack. Karl-Anthony Towns hasn’t been quite as good as a shooter this year, and he’s still the same frustrating defender who even pissed off Victor Wembanyama in the All-Star Game with his poor awareness. The Knicks’ highly-paid core gets all the attention, but I’m interested in what Miles McBride can add to this team if he can return from a core muscle injury that could reportedly sideline him until the playoffs. McBride was having a fantastic season and feels like one of the more underrated guards in the league at this point. He crushes with Brunson (+13.4 net-rating) and without him (+7.6 net-rating), and I don’t think they can win the East without him being healthy and productive. Mitchell Robinson’s rebounding will be another important factor in a potential NBA Finals run, and he’s always an injury concern even if he’s been largely healthy so far. The Knicks are still in Finals-or-bust mode, and there’s a lot of pressure to get it done this year with Tatum and Haliburton injured.

4. Detroit Pistons

The Pistons have been one of the best stories of the season, going from the worst team in the league two years ago to a young team on the rise that made the playoffs last year, to this season owning the league’s best winning percentage at the All-Star break. Detroit has gotten the job done with an elite defense, and Cade Cunningham making winning plays down the stretch as a lead shot-creator. Can that formula win in the playoffs? The Pistons do not have much shooting or spacing: they’re No. 27 in three-point rate, and No. 21 in three-point percentage so far this season. The rotation is deep, but it still feels like Cunningham has to do everything himself in crunch-time. I wanted Detroit to make a bigger splash at the deadline than Kevin Huerter (which was a trade largely made to move up in the draft), but given the state of the East, they still might be the favorites heading into the playoffs. I like that this feels like a classic Pistons team defined by defense and toughness. Good luck scoring on Isaiah Stewart and Jalen Duren inside, plus Ausar Thompson and Ron Holland on the wings. I’m not quite sold on Detroit’s offense yet, but they’ll have every chance to prove themselves on the biggest stages come playoff time.

3. San Antonio Spurs

The Spurs shouldn’t be a championship contender this early into the Victor Wembanyama era, but at this point it’s impossible to keep them out of the conversation. Wembanyama hasn’t even played a playoff game yet, but he already has his team competing at the top of the West with his league-best rim protection and constantly evolving scoring profile. Wembanyama has the best supporting cast of his young career leading this charge up the standings. De’Aaron Fox has given San Antonio a sorely-needed on-ball creation element, while Stephon Castle has made big strides coming off his NBA Rookie of Year season and looks more comfortable and more efficient as a scorer despite still being a poor three-point shooter. The young guys can’t take all the credit, because veteran role players like Luke Kornet, Harrison Barnes, and Julian Champagnie have also been very good in what they’re asked to do. San Antonio’s profile is similar to Detroit’s as a young team that made a huge leap this season thanks to an elite defense, but the lack of shooting around a former No. 1 overall draft pick is a bit concerning. The Spurs feel like they’re at least a year ahead of schedule, but they’ve already showed they can beat OKC this season with three big wins, and that alone is enough to mark them as a serious championship contender.

2. Denver Nuggets

Will the Nuggets ever get healthy this season? If so, it still feels like they could be the best team in the league. Aaron Gordon has been bothered by another hamstring injury just like last year, and now his upstart replacement in the lineup, Peyton Watson, has been dragged down by the same injury. Nikola Jokic is back in the lineup even if he’ll probably miss too many games to win MVP, and he’s still the best player in the league for my money. Jokic has more help this year with Watson developing into a key piece, plus Jamal Murray having arguably the best season of his career, but it’s still on the Joker to put together a signature playoff run that gets this team its second championship. With a fully healthy lineup around him, I’d take Jokic’s Nuggets over anyone just as I did in the preseason, but there’s still so much uncertainty around their health that it feels like an increasingly risky bet.

1. Oklahoma City Thunder

The Thunder started this season at 24-1 and looked like they would be a heavy favorite to win the championship. Since then, OKC went 18-13 into the All-Star break, and looked a lot more beatable. Likely MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is currently sidelined with an abdominal injury, Jalen Williams is battling a hamstring strain after being kept out with a wrist injury to start the year, and breakout sophomore Ajay Mitchell has also been in and out of the lineup lately. OKC needs to know if Williams can get back to the All-NBA level he played at this year, because he just hasn’t been the same player this season. SGA can still take this team over the finish line, but his teammates need to hit some shots. The Thunder are still a pretty average shooting team from deep, and that can catch up to them in the playoffs. The defense will still be elite if Chet Holmgren, Isaiah Hartenstein, and Alex Caruso can all stay healthy for the playoffs, and that alone should make them the favorites before it starts. I really think SGA is a special player, and one of the three or four best guards the league has seen since Michael Jordan retired. He can carry the Thunder across the finish line to become the league’s first back-to-back champ since Kevin Durant was on the Golden State Warriors. It just doesn’t feel like this is an undeniable dynasty at this point.

‘I’m better than a lot of guys, if not all of them’ Cavs wing Jaylon Tyson has bigger goals than the Rising Stars Game

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - DECEMBER 29: Jaylon Tyson #20 of the Cleveland Cavaliers looks on during the game against the San Antonio Spurs at Frost Bank Center on December 29, 2025 in San Antonio, Texas. (Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Jaylon Tyson doesn’t lack any confidence. That’s something fans of the Cleveland Cavaliers have quickly learned during the course of his sophomore breakout. When asked about his experiences in the recent Rising Stars Game, Tyson once again reminded us of how confident he is.

“It was cool sharing the court with those guys,” said Tyson. “You know, in the back of my mind, I know I’m better than a lot of those guys, if not all of them, right. I just want to go out there and prove that every single day, and then hopefully be an All-Star one day.”

There you have it. Being in the Rising Stars Game was cool, but Tyson is more interested in making it to Sunday’s event than competing in the rookie/sophomore challenge. If you’ve followed him this season, that shouldn’t surprise you.

Tyson is averaging 13.9 points, 5.4 rebounds, and 2.3 assists for Cleveland this season while shooting a scorching hot 47.5% from deep. That makes him the second-best shooter in the league for a minimum of 100 attempts. All the while, Tyson’s rounding into a jack-of-all-trades who can defend the perimeter, crash the offensive glass, and create plays for others in the short-roll.

In summary, Tyson not only talks the talk, but walks the walk. That’s why Donovan Mitchell has had zero hesitation taking him under his wing. Mitchell understands the value of a role player who can adapt to whatever the team asks of him.

“He plays hard, he’s picking up full-court, he’s doing all the things,” Mitchell said of Tyson’s performance in the Rising Stars Game. “He was rebounding, he’s passing, doing everything.”

Hard work and talent earn respect. Tyson’s managed to prove himself in the eyes of his superstar teammate by working relentlessly towards making sure his talents translate to playing winning basketball. He says getting Mitchell’s support has been a blessing, even if it’s sometimes annoying, like when he’s trying to shoot free throws.

“When he walked in, I was actually on the free-throw line,” said Tyson. “Mitchell was over there screaming something. So I’m over there, trying to make this free throw because I was trying to win MVP… and he’s over there screaming something… But I made it so I’m super, super blessed to have him as a vet.”

Jokes aside, Tyson is truly grateful for the mentorship Mitchell has offered. Sometimes even the most confident people in the world can benefit from external reassurance.

“He’s one of those guys I will keep a relationship with forever. I don’t think people understand how much that text message meant to me and the confidence it gave me. I give a lot of credit to him for all my success.”

Anthony Volpe and the Triple-A dilemma

TORONTO, ONTARIO - OCTOBER 05: Anthony Volpe #11 of the New York Yankees warms up before game two against the Toronto Blue Jays of the American League or National League Division Series at Rogers Centre on October 05, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We need to start this with an acknowledgement that Anthony Volpe will turn 25 on April 28th, the same age Aaron Judge was in his breakout season, so we can’t write the Yankee shortstop off just yet. Ok, age acknowledged.

I do still think the Yankees have an Anthony Volpe problem. The club has given him all the runway in the world — 472 games played out of a possible 486 to start his career. In that time he has never been a league average hitter, and while his 2024 was above average, entirely due to his strong defense, the onetime Top 10 prospect in baseball hasn’t exactly lived up to his billing.

And as Yogi said, it gets late early out there. Volpe has just three years of team control left, admittedly with players’ contract status ahead of a possible work stoppage next season up in the air. If his baseline is an 85ish wRC+ and you’re relying on defense, that’s not exactly something you want to bank on as arbitration raises creep up.

Volpe has also never been optioned to Triple-A, which is what we’re here to talk about today. He’s not going to be ready for Opening Day, as he continues to recover from shoulder surgery in the offseason. It’s tempting to bank on his healthy return being enough for a step forward, except for his remarkable consistency in producing a .660 OPS over three seasons. A rehab assignment is all but guaranteed, but I think the Yankees should go further than that.

I’m willing to concede that Volpe’s shoulder injury contributed to his poor defense, but his approach at the plate has been all over the place throughout his career. He’s vacillated between a contact-heavy attitude and one that prioritizes driving the ball in the air, and neither have really stuck. He runs into troughs where he steps in the bucket on every swing for three weeks that guts his overall production, even when he manages to establish some kind of average-or-better batting line.

Two months with Scranton allows Volpe to fully recover from labrum surgery, as well as work out those persistent mechanical failures in a much-lower-stakes environment. José Caballero, who will be at shortstop on Opening Day, is projected to produce exactly the same as Tony Fox’s 2025, and five points of wRC+ shy of Volpe’s 2026 projections. In effect, the Yankees have two Anthony Volpes on the roster already — Caballero shined in his post-trade-deadline time with the Yankees, so giving him some room to run starting the season may help him stay on that higher level, while giving Volpe time to correct his habitual swing failures can help HIM in the long run.

There is an icky factor to this suggestion, of course. A player accrues a year of MLB service after 172 days on either the 26 man roster or the injured list. Rehab assignments come within the scope of an IL stint, so Volpe would continue to accrue service on a brief trip to Scranton. Wheat I’m proposing is a much longer time at Triple-A, one that would make it impossible for Volpe to be on the 26-man roster for 172 days. This will delay Volpe’s free agency, ticketing him for the 2030 class instead of 2029.

That’s no small sacrifice to ask of a player, especially a player who could have his age-26 season wiped out by a work stoppage. You don’t need a player’s consent for a minor league option until he has five years of MLB service, but being clear with Volpe about the expectations, and the investment in his long-term success, would be crucial to this kind of decision.

I believe there is a world where Anthony Volpe could be an above-average MLB hitter. I believe that he has strange mechanical deviations and I also believe he has gotten into his own head on more than one occasion. Giving him a real Triple-A run, with a real chance at fixing what’s broken in his offensive approach, is the best way to square that complicated circle.

Denver Broncos roster status: Defensive front

DENVER, CO - OCTOBER 27: Denver Broncos defensive end Zach Allen (99) and linebacker Nik Bonitto (15) have a word on defense in the fourth quarter during a game between the Carolina Panthers and the Denver Broncos at Empower Field at Mile High on October 27, 2024 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

When the offseason starts, I’ve been enjoying sitting squarely in my General Manager armchair and reviewing our team’s roster. It is a process I like to go through that helps clarify for me where I see holes in the roster. This helps quite a bit as we go through the process of discussing moves, whether it be additions, subtractions, or draft picks, and why they make sense.

All of this is my personal opinion based on my tried-and-true eye test of what I’ve seen from these players on the field this season. For the sake of brevity, I’ll be leaving out guys who didn’t see the field in any significant way in 2025 and most Unrestricted Free Agents. This is meant to be a very high-level view of the roster and not a nuts and bolts review of each player (we’ll do that later in the year at an individual level), so I encourage you all to look at it through that lens.

Enjoy the discussion, join the subjective debate, and share your thoughts (good or bad) in the comments.

Let me give a tip of the hat to ftnfantasy.com for their information on snap percentages and www.overthecap.com for their information on current contracts for all players.

We’re kicking this series off by examining the defensive front and determining what holes the Broncos should look to fill in the 2026 NFL offseason. 

Player Rating Key

1 – Project / developmental – lacking the necessary skills to contribute as it stands today

2 – Backup quality – Can play, but isn’t a guy you want out there every snap

3 – Average starter – Doesn’t bring anything special to the table, but can do the job

4 – Good starter – An above-average talent

5 – Blue chip player – Top 10 talent in the NFL at what he does

Unit Rating Key

1 – Critical Need – lack of talent at starter and depth

2 – Lacking at least one starter

3 – Mediocre need

4 – Solid talent and depth

5 – Elite talent level

Defensive Linemen

PlayerSnapsTkl (combined)SacksTFLQb HitsPass Defended
Zach Allen9063874476
John Franklin-Myers588257.56150
Malcolm Roach480414350
D.J. Jones513393461
Eyioma Uwazurike488393.5550

Zach Allen – 5

Zach Allen has been one of the defense’s most consistent players since he joined the Broncos in 2023. He’s the kind of interior lineman every team wants on the roster who is able to bring consistent pressure and rarely loses ground in a one-on-one engagement. 

Allen’s greatest strength is his endurance and energy reserve. He’s on the field for most snaps and leads the unit by a large margin. The quality of play doesn’t drop from him as the game wears on. 

He’a an All-Pro for a reason and is an absolute menace to opposing quarterbacks with 7 sacks and a whopping 47 quarterback hits in 2025.

D.J. Jones – 4

D.J. Jones came to the Broncos by way of the San Francisco 49ers in 2022. He’s been a foundational starter for this defense and an absolute beast of a nose tackle for Vance Joseph.

Nose tackle isn’t ever going to be a flashy position, as many times the role for a player like Jones is to demand attention and hold space without giving up ground. That creates opportunities for players around him to make plays. Jones has a storied track record as a starter and is a consummate pro.

Malcolm Roach – 3.5

Malcolm Roach was brought to the Broncos from the Saints roster in 2023 to help shore up the Broncos’ run-stopping ability on defense. He’s well able to contribute as a pass rusher as well and has had an impressive run with the Broncos that recently earned him a contract extension.

Roach has been a fantastic rotational player for the team and a run-stopping force up front. Against the pass, he’s chipped in 4 sacks and 5 quarterback hits as a rotational player. The scheme the Broncos run is designed in a way that lets any position up front be productive. Roach is a testament to that, given that he’s superb vs the run and has been impressively productive as a pass rusher as well in his time with the Broncos.

Eyioma Uwazurike – 3

Eyioma Uwazurike, in my mind, has been the long-term plan exactly for this season, where the Broncos are very likely to lose the talents of John Franklin-Myers. JFM is going to be looking for a sack of money (which is well deserved). Uwazurike has been coached to step into that role in 2026.

Uwazurike was a rotational force for the defense in 2025. Like practically every defensive lineman on the team, he produced vs the run and the pass. He’s a player who has done nothing but get better at his craft every season, and from what I see is ready to challenge for a starting role next season with the team.

Unit Rating – 4.5

This group is full of talent, and this scheme lets every guy across the line have an impact from game to game. The defensive line is well-coached, and they have done an excellent job of finding talent and rotational depth.

I think John Franklin-Myers is going to get paid by someone else this offseason. That’s the only reason I have dinged the unit rating. If he were still under contract, this group is an easy 5. I do think the Broncos are ready for this loss, though. They will likely bring in another young player or depth free agent into the fray in the offseason. The core of the line is in place and ready to take on the challenge of 2026.

Outside Linebackers

PlayerSnapsTkl (combined)SacksTFLQb HitsPass DefendedInterceptions
Nik Bonitto7744614142820
Jonathan Cooper79250881640
Dondrea Tillman4754143932
Jonah Ellis378282.55510
Que Robinson162120.53310

Nik Bonitto – 5

Nik Bonitto is a superstar NFL edge. He’s a playmaker who wins games and consistently threatens offenses, which warps how opponents have to game plan. 

The freaky thing is that I think he could have more stats than he already has. He’s a true team player through and through who is just as comfortable dropping into coverage as he is blazing around tackles for a quick sack.

Talent-wise, this All-Pro is as good as it gets in the NFL.

Jonathan Cooper – 4.5

Jonathan Cooper is the powerhouse workhorse at the edge for this defense. He’s not quite as bendy and quick around the edge as Bonitto, but he makes up for it in raw power. His bull rush one-on-one is extremely difficult to stop. Many times, linemen are getting sacks because of a collapsed pocket due to Cooper just driving his guy back relentlessly.

Cooper also drops into coverage without problem at times. He’s only dinged ½ a point because his pass rush doesn’t have as much nuance to it as Bonitto’s, which leads to scenarios where he’ll have a matchup that is well-equipped to slow him down.

Dondrea Tillman – 3.5

Dondrea Tillman is a player who rotates in at the edge, and you hardly even notice. He’s a gifted athlete who has a superb grasp of how to impact plays when he is on the field. I’d honestly count him as a perfect outside linebacker rotational player, much like I saw Shaq Barrett when he was with the Broncos behind Von Miller and DeMarcus Ware.

Jonah Ellis – 3.5

Jonah Ellis is nipping at Tillman’s heels for being the best non-starting edge on this team. He’s developed into a superb backer for the Broncos. I’ve liked his play against the run a bit better than what I’ve seen from Tillman. His pass-rush ability is still potent, though, and I don’t think he’s yet to hit his ceiling.

Que Robinson – 2

The Broncos drafted Que Robinson in the 4th round of the 2025 NFL Draft. He’s right on track as a development player and accounted for himself well in the opportunities he did get to see in 2025. He’s got pass-rush ability and is excellent at shooting gaps to blow up runs.

Unit Rating – 5

I don’t think you can find a better outside linebacker room in the NFL. I honestly think both Tillman and Ellis could start in the NFL today. I think Robinson will have that same stamp this next season. In today’s NFL, you can never have enough pass rushers, and the Broncos are absolutely filthy rich at edge in that regard.

Inside Linebackers

PlayerSnapsTkl (combined)SacksTFLQb HitsInterceptionsPass Defended
Alex Singleton119413513304
Justin Strnad666584.55813
Dre Greenlaw3864312212

Dre Greenlaw – 3

The Denver Broncos rolled the dice on an injury-risk player when they signed Dre Greenlaw.  The dice weren’t quite snake-eyes, but they weren’t far off in 2025. Greenlaw missed 8 games in 2025. He did make a few plays when he was on the field, but fell far short of the mark in being an impact free agent signing for the Broncos in 2025.

The hope is that the excellent training and conditioning staff of the Broncos can help him get healthy in 2026 so he can be the playmaker that he is capable of being.

Unit Rating – 1

With both Alex Singleton and Justin Strnad being unrestricted free agents in 2026, this is the #1 biggest problem area of the team’s roster overall. What’s crazy to me is that I can see a world where the Broncos let Greenlaw go as well (which would recoup them $6M). 

Of the three linebackers that were on the roster in 2025, Justin Strnad was the guy I thought played at the highest level. I think this unit can and should look very different in 2026, and that should lead to a big improvement for this already awesome defense.

Defensive roster status overall

  • Defensive Linemen: 4.5
  • Outside Linebackers: 5
  • Inside Linebackers: 1

Falcons outside linebacker review: A great year, a muddled future

Dec 21, 2025; Glendale, Arizona, USA; Atlanta Falcons linebacker Jalon Walker (11) against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

It didn’t take long for the good feelings about the Falcons outside linebacker group to curdle. James Pearce Jr.‘s arrested on very serious charges of stalking his ex-girlfriend, ramming her car, and resisting arrest means his future with the team is extremely cloudy just weeks after he finished 2025 with a rookie Falcons record of 10.5 sacks. Leonard Floyd, Arnold Ebiketie, DeAngelo Malone, and Khalid Kareem are all free agents, leaving only Jalon Walker as a sure thing for 2026.

But what a year 2025 was, eh? Let’s review this past season and talk about what’s ahead.

Jalon Walker

Pearce overshadowed Walker to an extent with his gaudy sack totals, but aside from some struggles in coverage, the Georgia product was excellent in his rookie. Despite dealing with injuries that limited him early on, Walker proved to be a stellar run defender—one of a small handful in Atlanta—who added enough big play potential and pass rushing acumen to make him an excellent piece of the defense in 2025.

Walker had 29 pressures—the fifth-highest total on the team—and was third in sacks. He flew to the ball against the run and missed just 5% of his tackle attempts, showcasing his reliability, instincts, and strength. And Walker tied for the team lead with two forced fumbles, making it clear he can be a nuisance in that regard as well.

There are no red flags here to talk about. Walker should only get better as he improves his coverage chops and refines his pass rush skill set, and teammates and coaches have raved about his leadership and attitude. There’s little question that if he stays healthy, Walker will be a force for good and a long-term team captain in Atlanta, and the Falcons need him to be every bit as good as they (and I) think he can be.

James Pearce Jr.

Pearce got off to a hot start with eight pressures in his first two weeks, but had just five over his next five weeks and one sack total in the first nine weeks. It appeared he’d have a useful but not spectacular rookie season—his run defense was pretty grisly at times, too—until the lights came on in Week 9 against the Patriots.

From that point on, Pearce’s run defense improved in fits and starts and he put up 32 pressures, 9.5 sacks, and 14 stops over the final eight weeks of the season. The vaunted pass rush ability clicked, Pearce was routinely beating decent tackles and wreaking havoc, and the slow transformation into a more well-rounded player made him a favorite for Defensive Rookie of the Year, an award he finished third in voting for. It was enough to give him the Falcons rookie record in sacks and set him up as the most promising long-term pass rusher since early Vic Beasley or even John Abraham.

The problem, of course, is that there’s no guarantee he plays for the Falcons or in the NFL next year, or in the most extreme case at all. Pearce was arrested and charged with multiple felonies earlier this month after allegedly stalking his ex-girlfriend, repeatedly running into her car to try to prevent her from going to police, hitting a police officer with his car, fleeing police, and then resisting arrest, with the last bit being on video. Given the very real potential that he could have severely injured or killed his ex-girlfriend or himself and that cops and prosecutors are not known to be lenient with offenses that involve police, Pearce’s charges should not be waved away, and there’s the very real potential of jail time even though we all have a healthy degree of skepticism toward that for famous athletes. The most exciting pass rusher the Falcons have had in many, many years is facing allegations that mean he may have thrown away his 2026 season or even his entire career, and the Falcons have to plan as though they may not have him for a significant chunk of this upcoming season as a result.

Leonard Floyd

Early in the year, Floyd put up two sacks in four weeks, and then managed 1.5 over the final 13 weeks of the season. While the pass rushing production wasn’t there—his pressure total per Pro Football Focus was his lowest since 2017 —he was useful enough against he run and occasionally in coverage to be a worthwhile member of the team’s rotation. The fact that his production came early when the rookies were either banged up or still getting their feet under them helped a great deal.

Given that he’ll be 34 years old in 2026 and his past three seasons show a small but clear pattern of decline, Floyd probably won’t be back unless he’s willing to play on a bargain deal. Having him as a veteran presence and durable, useful outside linebacker in 2025 still mattered a lot.

Arnold Ebiketie

As always, Ebiketie got stronger as the year went on. Unlike in past years, the opportunity was not there for him.

Ebiketie played a new career-low number of snaps in 2025 as he fell out of favor somewhat in Jeff Ulbrich’s defense. His 25 pressures in 384 snaps weren’t bad—Floyd had 36 in 460, for comparison’s sake—and Ebiketie tended to get more pressure when he received more snaps. But overall he managed just two sacks, was the clear fourth fiddle in this group, and had enough quietly disgruntled social media posts to conclude he’s probably gone.

I would welcome back Ebiketie because his run defense is good enough and his back half production strong enough that he’d be a valuable piece of the puzzle, but his reduction in playing time and clear desire to have a larger role will probably conspire to have him land elsewhere.

Khalid Kareem & DeAngelo Malone

Kareem had six pressures in 71 snaps, or a pressure every 12 snaps or so, and was solid against the run in his very limited playing time. He’s someone I want back as a bottom of the depth chart option, because he’s a useful player in limited doses. We don’t know—and probably won’t find out—what he could be with more.

Malone played just 19 snaps on defense and was quiet in 2025, but he was one of Marquice Williams’ core special teams player. With Williams out as special teams coordinator, Malone may not be back.

Outlook: Deeply uncertain

I’m very bullish on Walker, a player who was quietly very good in 2025 and put up 5.5 sacks as a rookie. I think we’re looking at a 7-10 sack player annually who also offers playmaking ability, strong work against the run, and enough promise in coverage to be an asset in every facet of his game. The fact that he’s just entering his second year and the Falcons have a fifth-year option means he should be here a long time, and may well be an elite defender well before that contract is up.

Everything else is deeply uncertain, as I said in the headline for this section. Pearce is almost certainly heading for a multi-week suspension at best and a hefty prison sentence at worst, though the way his case winds through the legal system could determine whether he’s on the commissioner’s exempt list in Week 1 or suspended. It is within the realm of possibility that the Falcons will determine, either because of what happens in court or what comes out in the months ahead, that they don’t want Pearce on the team and will cut him. Regardless, it’s fair to expect the Falcons to be without Pearce for multiple weeks in 2026 and perhaps entirely.

Adding to the uncertainty is the fact that the Falcons don’t have a single other full-time outside linebacker/EDGE under contract right now, though they’ll use Zach Harrison and Brandon Dorlus there in some formations. Floyd would likely only return if he was quite cheap, given his modest production in 2025, and Ebiketie should be headed elsewhere after a quiet season and a diminished role under Jeff Ulbrich. That leaves Khalid Kareem as a beyond-obvious re-signing given his solid run defense and occasional pass rushing chops to be, say, the fourth or fifth guy there; perhaps you bring back DeAngelo Malone for his special teams work. You still need a legitimate second and third guy in the rotation for this group to not take a major step back in 2026.

With the many needs Atlanta has heading into free agency and the draft, it’s clear they can’t fix everything. But the potentially massive loss of pass rushing production that could come if the Falcons don’t have Pearce and can’t effectively replace their 2025 options could prove to be a fatal problem, so we’ll need to see a smart plan that doesn’t rely on faith and hope to not brace for problems.

Potential cap casualties that could help the Panthers offense

CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA - AUGUST 08: General manager Dan Morgan of the Carolina Panthers looks on prior to the NFL Preseason 2025 game against the Cleveland Browns at Bank of America Stadium on August 08, 2025 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Carolina Panthers enter the 2026 offseason with plenty of cap space and pretty easy means to make even more. They have a quarterback on a rookie contract, which is prime time to spend a bunch of money on a supporting cast. Other teams are not so fortunate. There are going to be a lot of tough decisions being made around the league where not-bad players are going to get cut purely for the cap savings. The Panthers can pounce on some of those free agents to bolster their offensive group. Here are a few names to look out for.

Colby Parkinson, TE, Rams

Sean McVay used his offensive genius guru mind games and did this crazy thing where he adapted his scheme to his personnel in 2025, a foreign concept to many NFL minds. After operating almost exclusively out of three wide receiver sets for many years, he pivoted to a lot of three tight end groupings to capitalize on the team’s depth at the position. But that means the Rams are at a bit of a roster crunch at the position. Tyler Higbee is a free agent, so the team may simply let him walk and keep Parkinson and Terrance Ferguson. But if they bring Higbee back on a cheaper deal and want to chase some big fish in free agency, they can $7 million by releasing Parkinson.

Parkinson would immediately be the best tight end on the Panthers roster and add another reliable intermediate target for Bryce Young. And we’ve already seen him have success in Bank of America Stadium.

Jonnu Smith, TE, Steelers

Sticking with the tight end position, Smith seems a more likely cut than Parkinson. The Steelers took a shot trading for Smith to create a one-two punch with Pat Freiermeuth. That never really panned out, and Darnell Washington ate into a fair share of snaps as well. The Steelers are currently on the hook for $22 million in cap charges for Freirmeuth and Smith, which is too much for their production, especially when Washington is a fine TE2 and outpaced Smith in production last year.

Smith is just one year removed from a breakout season with the Dolphins where he tallied 884 yards and eight touchdowns on 88 catches. He’s just 30 years old, so it’s not like that talent completely evaporated. Like Parkinson, Jonnu would immediately step in as the Panthers best tight end and bring some real pop to that position.

Darnell Mooney, WR, Falcons

Fun fact: if nothing changes, Mooney would go into next season carrying the largest cap hit among Falcons wide receivers. He’s due to count over $18 million against the cap, and the Falcons could save nearly $12 million by designating him a post-June 1 cut. Should he hit the market, he’d fit the bill of wide receiver that the Panthers are looking for to complete their room. He’s popped off as a deep threat at points during his career, though he’s been inconsistent. A change of scenery could do him good, and he’d add some variety to a Panthers receiver room that currently features a bunch of tall, long guys.

Tank Dell, WR, Texans

This would feel kinda mean given that Dell has spent the past year and a half rehabbing from a catastrophic knee injury he suffered during the 2024 season, but the Texans have built up their wide receiver group in his absence. They have Nico Collins and used two draft picks on Iowa State wide receivers that were pretty good as rookies. There might just not be room for Dell, and the cap squeezed Texans can save a couple million by releasing him. If Dell can get back to health, he’d be a great fit as a young, speedy deep threat to complement the big bodies the Panthers currently have manning the position.

Elgton Jenkins, C/G, Packers

The Panthers are pretty good along the offensive line when healthy, but if there is a question mark, it’s at the center position. Jenkins carries a massive $24 million cap hit this offseason, and the Packers, who are hurting for cap space, could reclaim the vast majority of that if they release him. His play dipped last season, but he has been a Pro Bowler twice. Should he come at a reasonable price, he could be a nice acquisition to compete at center or provide insurance for Damien Lewis and Robert Hunt.

Pistons vs Knicks Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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The NBA returns from the All-Star break with a possible Eastern Conference Finals preview with the Detroit Pistons heading to face the New York Knicks.

My Pistons vs. Knicks predictions trust the veteran team to have better handled its week off as something to keep in mind with all NBA picks on Thursday, February 19.

Pistons vs Knicks prediction

Pistons vs Knicks best bet: Knicks -4.5 (-105)

While the Detroit Pistons have had the New York Knicks’ number in two meetings thus far this season, this is a ripe scheduling spot for the Knicks. Yes, even right after the All-Star Break, it can be argued New York has a scheduling edge.

The young Pistons just had a week of vacation, while the veteran Knicks likely treated it more as recovery and recuperation time.

Furthermore, Detroit’s 5.5-game lead in the East should induce some coasting in the season’s final third.

Pistons vs Knicks same-game parlay

Jalen Duren is not 100%, hence there not being prop bets available on him as of Wednesday afternoon.

Less Duren should mean more Tobias Harris, even if this matchup has yielded two distinct Unders already this season.

Pistons vs Knicks SGP

  • Pistons -4.5
  • Under 222.5
  • Tobias Harris Over 13.5 points

Our "from downtown" SGP: Towns Returns To Form

Karl-Anthony Towns entered the All-Star break struggling from deep, but the rest should have restored the legs beneath the best-shooting big man in NBA history.

Pistons vs Knicks SGP

  • Pistons -4.5
  • Under 222.5
  • Tobias Harris Over 13.5 points
  • Karl-Anthony Towns Over 1.5 three-pointers

Pistons vs Knicks odds

  • Spread: Pistons +4.5 | Knicks -4.5
  • Moneyline: Pistons +150 | Knicks -180
  • Over/Under: Over 222.5 | Under 222.5

Pistons vs Knicks betting trend to know

The two meetings between these two teams already this season fell short of their totals by 21.5 and 22.5 points. Find more NBA betting trends for Pistons vs. Knicks.

How to watch Pistons vs Knicks

LocationMadison Square Garden, New York, NY
DateThursday, February 19, 2026
Tip-off7:30 p.m. ET
TVPrime Video

Pistons vs Knicks latest injuries

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Michigan Football’s top 5 positions of need in 2027 recruiting class

ORLANDO, FL - DECEMBER 31: Michigan Wolverines quarterback Bryce Underwood (19) makes a deep pass attempt during the Cheez-It Bowl between the Michigan Wolverines and the Texas Longhorns on Wednesday, December 31, 2025 at Camping World Stadium in Orlando, FL (Photo by Peter Joneleit/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Michigan Football has already received commitments from three high school recruits in the 2027 class in four-star edge rusher Recarder Kitchen, and three-star interior offensive linemen Tristan Dare and Louis Esposito.

However, there are still many commitments to be made before all is said and done. Based on the current depth chart and incoming recruits, here are five of the top positions of need for Kyle Whittingham and his staff.

Quarterback

Four-star Peter Bourque’s decommitment partially strained the nucleus of this class. The Wolverines still have at least another two seasons of Bryce Underwood, and incoming freshmen Tommy Carr and Brady Smigiel, along with transfers Colin Hurley and Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi add much-needed depth.

But without Bourque, quarterback has once again become a top priority, and ensuring there is a solid succession plan for Underwood is paramount.

Offensive tackle

The aforementioned offensive linemen are likely better-suited for interior duties, and though a 2026 group led by four-stars Marky Walbridge, Malakai Lee and Tommy Fraumann is encouraging, we saw this past season that injuries can easily derail the starting unit. Adding as much depth and talent as possible would help maintain the Wolverines’ trench-engrained philosophy.

Now, this is still a young tackle unit with guys like Blake Fraizer and Andrew Babalola — as well as an interior devoid of a senior — but continuing to ensure steady bookends will ease the transition into the Whittingham era.

Defensive tackle

There is a lot to like with the Wolverines’ young edges, led by Cam Brandt, Nate Marshall, Dominic Nichols and a trio of incoming freshmen in Carter Meadows, Tariq Boney and McHale Blade.

However, the interior is not such a sure bet. Whittingham’s teams have been built on toughness, and on most good football teams, that toughness resides in the most brutal area of the trenches. Getting more bodies on the interior of the defense should be a major focus in the 2027 class.

Linebacker

The loss of Cole Sullivan hurts…a lot. He looked poised to take over as the guy at linebacker this year, but he is off to Norman to play for the Sooners. The 2026 class features a trio of three-stars in Aden Reeder, Kaden Catchings and Markel Dabney, but banking on lower-rated prospects is not the best plan.

New defensive coordinator Jay Hill loves to run nickel sets, which rely on linebackers doing a little bit of everything. The depth chart in 2027 will not feature much experience, so adding a true MIKE in this class would solve some of those issues.

Nickel

Speaking of Hill’s defense, perhaps no player is more important to operating the 4-2-5 base than a proper nickel. Look at how Nick Emmanwori transformed the Seattle Seahawks’ defense. No, Michigan is not getting a true freshman to play like Emmanwori, but that versatility allows the defense to stop the run with lighter boxes and stay prepared for passing plays.

This could either be a cornerback or a more mobile safety, but perhaps adding a true athlete whom Whittingham and Hill can mold into their nickel is the most tantalizing option to get this defense back atop the national ranks.

Real Madrid release statement on alleged racist abuse directed at Vinicius Junior

Real Madrid release statement on alleged racist abuse directed at Vinicius Junior
Real Madrid release statement on alleged racist abuse directed at Vinicius Junior

Real Madrid have now declared a position on the alleged racial abuse from Gianluca Prestianni towards Vinicius Junior, following the incident on Tuesday night in their Champions League win over Benfica. Los Blancos have declared that it has taken an active role in the UEFA investigation into Prestianni’s alleged comments.

On Tuesday night, the anti-racism protocol was activated by the referee after Vinicius told him that he had been called a monkey by Prestianni. UEFA announced the following day that they had opened an investigation into the incident. If Prestianni is found guilty, he will be banned for a minimum of 10 games. Thus far he and Benfica have defended his innocence.

Real Madrid statement

Image via Patricia De Melo Moreira/AFP vía Getty Images

On the night in question, Real Madrid released an update explaining that the anti-racism protocol had been activated. On Thursday, Real Madrid released a statement explaining they had helped gather evidence and submitted it to UEFA. They also expressed gratitude for the support from around the world.

Real Madrid C. F. announces that today it has submitted all available evidence to UEFA regarding the incidents that occurred last Tuesday, February 17, during the Champions League match our team played in Lisbon against SL Benfica. Our club has actively collaborated with the investigation opened by UEFA following the unacceptable episodes of racism experienced during that match. Real Madrid appreciates the unanimous support, backing, and affection that our player Vinicius Jr. has received from all areas of the global football community. Real Madrid will continue working, in collaboration with all institutions, to eradicate racism, violence, and hate in sports and society.

Arbeloa and Kylian Mbappe statements

Manager Alvaro Arbeloa stated after the game that they were behind Vinicius, and would have walked off the pitch had he decided to do so. That message was echoed by Trent Alexander-Arnold and Aurelien Tchouameni, but Kylian Mbappe went a step further, declaring that he had heard the racial abuse, and that Prestianni should be banned from the competition.

What do you expect from Dylan Beavers this year?

Can the rookie outfielder earn an every day role or will he be relegated to a platoon in RF?
BALTIMORE, MD - SEPTEMBER 25: Dylan Beavers #12 of the Baltimore Orioles runs back to the dug out between inning during a baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays at the Oriole Park at Camden Yards on September 25, 2025 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Orioles outfield is completely remade going into the 2026 season, with Colton Cowser now the full time CF and Taylor Ward brought in to man LF. However, the Orioles outfielder I am most excited to see take the field in 2026 is rookie Dylan Beavers.

The 24-year-old former Cal Golden Bear comes into 2026 after a 2025 season that saw him take a massive leap as a player. Beavers finished the 2024 season as the Orioles No. 8 prospect, seemingly destined to remain stuck behind Heston Kjerstad and Enrique Bradfield Jr. in the O’s prospect pecking order. Instead, Beavers parlayed a Triple-A season that saw him hit .304 with a .934 OPS, 15 HRs and 31 SBs into an August MLB debut and clear status as the Orioles best OF prospect.

However, his rise to Top 100 prospect status and encouraging Major League cameo doesn’t guarantee him a starting spot with the 2026 O’s. With Ward and Cowser set for a lion share of the playing time in left and center, Beavers is set to battle it out with Tyler O’Neill for the RF job.

If O’Neill can stay healthy, the two may form a platoon with Beavers playing against right handed pitchers and TON playing against lefties. Beavers was particularly strong against righties in his short debut, posting a .798 OPS with eight extra-base hits in 90 ABs. If he can improve upon those numbers, he may force manager Craig Albernaz to give him the every-day RF role.

Major projection sites seem differ on how they think Beavers’ season will play out:

  • ZiPS: .249/.336/.414 with 17 HR and 15 SB in 550 PA
  • BRef: .247/.347/.407 with 8 HR and 5 SB in 269 PA

FanGraphs’ ZiPS projection paints a picture of Beavers playing a major role in the Orioles outfield, getting close to a 20/20 season while taking a slight step back from the .375 on-base percentage he posted in 2025. It helps that ZiPS projects the oft-injured O’Neill to only play 89 games in 2026.

Baseball Reference projects Beavers as more of a part-time player who splits time all season with O’Neill. Each projection service projects the 24-year-old to take a jump in his batting average, while taking a dip on on-base percentage and maintaining his slugging output.

If Beavers outperforms the modest projections, he could become the exact hitter the exact hitter the Orioles need at the top of their lineup. In his 35 games last season, he posted an elite chase rate and BB%, suggesting the .375 OPS is something that he can maintain as he gains more Major League exposure. He also showcased near elite speed that could make 25+ SB a real possibility. If everything breaks right, the O’s could have a faster version of Nick Markakis patrolling RF for years to come.

Villanova hosting 2028 four-star during Saturday’s showdown

Kevin Willard has his eyes on the Class of 2028 during the early stages of its recruiting.

According to Dushawn London of 247Sports, four-star guard Rowan Phillips will be on an unofficial visit to Villanova on Saturday as the Wildcats host No. 5 UConn.

Phillips is currently ranked as the No. 21 overall player in the class and No. 3 player in Pennsylvania. The 6-foot-6 shooting guard currently attends Westtown School in Norristown, PA, which is just 16 miles from the Finneran Pavilion.

Phillips is not the first sophomore that Willard has targeted already. Early in February, five-star Mason Collins attended Villanova’s victory over Seton Hall. The next day, he shared that he received an offer from the Wildcats. Villanova was Collins’ third official offer. He received his first from South Carolina followed by Virginia, while also drawing attention from Duke, Syracuse, Notre Dame, and Clemson.

The Wildcats will play one of their biggest games of the season on Saturday. If there is any time to host a recruit, it would be in a showdown against a top-five team in the nation.

Morning Report: Daniel Cormier roasts commentator as ‘stupid’ for spreading Tom Aspinall-UFC split rumor

Daniel Cormier
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - JULY 18: Daniel Cormier is seen on stage during a Q&A session prior to the UFC 318 ceremonial weigh-ins at Smoothie King Center on July 18, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Jonathan Bachman/Zuffa LLC)

Daniel Cormier is frustrated at fake news being spread about Tom Aspinall potentially parting ways with the UFC.

This past week, a section of social media was buzzing at an alleged report that the heavyweight champion and the UFC had mutually agreed he would vacate his title under the condition that he be granted his release from the promotion. Aspinall has been inactive since suffering injuries to both eyes after being poked by Ciryl Gane this past October at UFC 321, a foul that resulted in a disappointing no-contest and Aspinall being indefinitely sidelined as he underwent surgery to address the issue.

Former UFC fighter Josh Thomson was one of the more prominent names to spread the rumor, which was debunked by Uncrowned’s Petesy Carroll.

This is not true. No one has contacted Tom Aspinall or his team about vacating his title or being exiled from the roster. Seems like that would be important in terms of a mutual agreement. https://t.co/cIgNoFq07r

— Peter Carroll (@PetesyCarroll) February 13, 2026

Cormier can only shake his head at his friend and fellow MMA pundit, as well as many fans, biting on an unfounded report.

“You know who’s not smart at times?” Cormier said on his YouTube channel. “I love the fans, but there’s a section of fans that sometimes they’re so emotional… You know sometimes a kid might want something and if it doesn’t work out for them, they get pissed off. There’s a section of fans that get mad for things that are really out of people’s control. Example: Tom Aspinall in his last fight gets eye-poked, fight gets stopped, but we all wanted it to keep going. I was mad, but to say that Tom Aspinall just didn’t want to fight was crazy.

“Now we find out, ‘according to Josh Thomson,’ bro, did you see Josh Thomson? That’s my buddy, but he’s so stupid. … Josh goes, ‘UFC asked Tom Aspinall to vacate the title until he’s ready to go. He said he’d be willing to vacate the title as long as they released him.’ It’s not true. It’s just not true. Where did Josh Thomson hear that?”

If Aspinall remains sidelined for a prolonged period of time, it’s entirely possible the promotion strips Aspinall or moves on with an interim championship fight, but as of now, there have been no official negotiations between the especially in regards to a possible release.

Cormier wonders now how long it is until UFC CEO Dana White and the matchmakers actually have to sit down and have a talk with Team Aspinall.

“How long does the UFC wait, though?” Cormier said. “Hey, Josh was wrong. I don’t think that ask has been made yet. If the UFC wanted to, they could just make an interim title fight between someone else while the champion waits. Tom Aspinall fought last year. How long, though, do they wait before we start to see an interim title fight or maybe some movement in that division or trying to get some movement going in that division?”

Like many fans, fighters, and media members, Cormier is concerned about the health of the heavyweight division going forward with Aspinall sidelined, Gane in limbo, Jon Jones seemingly too injured to fight again, and Francis Ngannou twiddling his thumbs with PFL.

The current crop of UFC contenders isn’t doing much to inspire Cormier’s confidence.

“It’s just not in a great place,” Cormier said. “Would you say that if you put Waldo Cortes-Acosta in there with Ciryl Gane or Tom Aspinall, he’d be competitive? [Cortes-Acosta lost to Sergei Pavlovich] and Pavlovich got knocked out by Tom Aspinall in the first round. It just feels like there’s a clear separation between the best guys [and the rest].”


TOP STORIES

FIGHT. Anthony Hernandez would like to “torture” Sean Strickland for five rounds at UFC Houston.

Next. Alex Pereira might have to move on if Jon Jones’ arthritis keeps him out of the cage.

Ouch. Eddie Hearn roasts Dana White, Zuffa Boxing, and White’s “daddy” Turki Alalshikh.

Real. Gina Carano’s coach says she’s in it to win it with Ronda Rousey fight.

Deleted. Conor McGregor tweets and deletes a fight update.

FAFO. Deen the Great found out the hard way not to get in the face of a former UFC fighter.


VIDEO STEW

Damon Martin chats with coach John Wood.

Anik and Florian weigh in on state of heavyweight division.

Best of Fluffy.


FLAVOR IN YOUR EAR

Fighter vs. Writer. Damon Martin and Matt Brown talk about how to fix the UFC heavyweight division and why Kamaru Usman deserves to challenge Islam Makhachev for the welterweight title.


SOCIAL MEDIA BOUILLABAISSE

It’s on.

Yeah, he’s gonna be on the card.

If you need some more mma guys @netflix@MostVpromotions hit me up , I represent myself ! 🫡

— Derek Brunson (@DerekBrunson) February 18, 2026

Would watch.

He’s back! (kind of)

New bonuses, new nickname.

“100 Grand” Dan checkin’ in for media day 👋@DynamiteDan808 | #UFCHouston

[ SAT FEB 21 | 8pmET on @ParamountPlus ] pic.twitter.com/bhy1idrNUj

— UFC (@ufc) February 18, 2026

Scratch it.

I mean…

It’s not the point she’s trying to make, but it’s pretty funny that Ronda saw Gina looking bad and out of shape and her first thought was “I should fight her.”

Next time one of my friends puts on holiday weight I’m gonna offer to run a fade. https://t.co/l4jzOA72rk

— Jed Meshew II (@JedKMeshew) February 18, 2026

FINAL THOUGHTS

Fans, please don’t get your news from Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, etc. And if you are intrigued by a rumor, please just take five minutes to do some basic Googling and see whether it’s been verified by any credible source. Like, for example, MMA FIGHTING DOT COM.

Take care of yourselves, everyone.


EXIT POLL


If you find something you’d like to see in the Morning Report, hit up @AlexanderKlee or @JedKMeshew on Twitter and let us know about it. Also, follow MMAFighting on Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and like us on Facebook.

Leicester appeal against six-point deduction

A general view of Leicester City's King Power Stadium
Leicester have been beaten by Birmingham City and Southampton since being deducted six points earlier this month [Getty Images]

Leicester City have appealed against a decision to deduct them six points for breaching English Football League financial rules.

The sanction was imposed on the Foxes earlier this month and saw them drop to 20th in the Championship, only outside the relegation zone on goal difference.

Two successive defeats since have led to them dropping into the bottom three, two points from safety.

Leicester were charged by the Premier League in May for breaching profit and sustainability rules (PSR) in the three years up to 2023-24.

The Premier League said that they will be "seeking to have the appeal resolved urgently" and before the end of this season.

This process will include a ruling on the Premier League's own appeal against the independent commission's decision not to sanction Leicester for late submission of the club's annual accounts.

Both parties have submitted their appeals to the chair of the judicial panel, who will now appoint an appeal board to hear the case.

Deduction 'disproportionate'

Leicester, who appointed Gary Rowett as their new head coach on Wednesday, have yet to comment on their appeal.

But when the points deduction was announced, the club described it as "disproportionate".

"While the commission's findings significantly reduced the unprecedented scale of the sanction originally sought by the Premier League, the recommendation remains disproportionate and does not adequately reflect the mitigating factors presented, the importance of which cannot be overstated given the potential impact on our sporting ambitions this season," the statement said.

Under PSR, Premier League clubs cannot lose more than £105m over three years but the figure is reduced by £22m for every season a club spends outside the top flight.

Leicester's accounts for the period ending 30 June, 2024, showed a loss of £19.4m.

In their 2022-23 accounts, Leicester confirmed an £89.7m loss, while in the 12 months up to May 2022, they lost a club-record £92.5m.

Those figures do not take into account 'add backs' - costs such as building infrastructure and investing in women's football that the Premier League and EFL view as in general interests of clubs.

Despite being charged by the Premier League, the EFL took on the case following their relegation to the second tier.

Although the Premier League had jurisdiction, the Foxes have been sanctioned under EFL PSR rules.

Leicester had argued their case should have been considered over a 36-month period rather than 37 months, caused by a delay in submitting their accounts for 2023-24.

The commission ruled that it should be 36 months meaning the club's overspend of the EFL's rules during that period was £20.8m above the £83m limit.

Although a maximum 12-point penalty could have been imposed, the committee worked down based on Leicester's percentage overspend and settled on six in light of the club's "improving financial position" over the assessment period.

ESPN: Super Bowl contender is best team fit for top Saints free agent

This year’s top free agent defensive back -- and current New Orleans Saints cornerback Alontae Taylor -- is expected to be one of the most sought-after players on the market this offseason. A young, scheme-dependent defender with significant upside, Taylor will almost certainly draw plenty of interest once free agency opens in early March.

ESPN analyst Matt Bowen highlighted the best fits for his top 50 upcoming free agents. Among that group, Bowen ranked the former Tennessee standout No. 12 overall, the highest-ranked defensive back on his list. Within his evaluation, Bowen identified a perennial Super Bowl contender as the ideal landing spot for Taylor, noting that he would provide the exact polish and versatility the team’s secondary has been searching for.

"The Rams' lack of speed in the secondary -- which showed up in their NFC Championship Game loss to the Seahawks -- must be addressed this offseason. Taylor, who had two interceptions with the Saints in 2025, would provide the Rams a versatile cover corner with disruptive traits and the ability to play outside or in the slot. Chicago and Las Vegas are good fits, as well."

As one of the more volatile players at his position, Taylor is often viewed as a high-risk, high-reward defender. He possesses excellent physical tools including elite explosiveness and a willingness to play aggressively in run support. However, there have been moments in coverage where technique and consistency have faltered.

Entering a system with established defensive structure with talent around him could maximize Taylor’s strengths while minimizing his weaknesses. A team like the Rams, who have remained competitive defensively but appear thin in the secondary, presents an intriguing option. Taylor’s versatility would allow defensive coordinator Chris Shula to deploy him both outside and, in the slot, depending on matchup.

It’s also worth noting that the Rams previously unlocked the versatility of Jalen Ramsey by moving him around the formation, including impactful snaps inside. If Los Angeles believes Taylor can tap into a similar hybrid role the pairing makes conceptual sense. For a contender looking to inject some speed and physicality into its secondary, Taylor may be one of the most intriguing upside bets of the 2026 free agency cycle.

This article originally appeared on Saints Wire: NFL free agency: Rams named best team fit for Saints' Alontae Taylor

‘A load of rubbish’ – Winger emphatically shoots down latest round of Liverpool transfer rumours

‘A load of rubbish’ – Winger emphatically shoots down latest round of Liverpool transfer rumours
‘A load of rubbish’ – Winger emphatically shoots down latest round of Liverpool transfer rumours

Anthony Gordon has emphatically shot down the latest batch of rumours linking him with a move to Liverpool, dismissing the speculation as ‘a load of rubbish’.


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The Newcastle winger had been on the verge of joining the Reds two summers ago and was reportedly ‘keen’ on returning to his native city, but ultimately he stayed put at St James’ Park and was part of the Magpies squad which won the Carabao Cup last year.

There were reports in recent days that the Anfield giants remain interested in recruiting the 24-year-old and are leading the race to sign him ahead of Arsenal and Manchester City.

However, speaking to the media after scoring four times in Newcastle’s 6-1 demolition of Qarabag on Wednesday, Gordon didn’t mince his words in putting the kibosh on discourse over a prospective exit from Tyneside.

Gordon dismisses Liverpool rumours as ‘a load of rubbish’

When he was asked about the transfer rumours which mentioned Liverpool, the winger replied (via Chronicle Live): “About me? I haven’t seen them. What are they saying?

“It’s the same old, same old. I think they just pick names out of a hat. They do! I haven’t heard anything; they might want to tell me before they tell you [the media]. I have gone through enough transfer stuff now to know that it is all a load of rubbish.”

(Photo by Aziz Karimov/Getty Images)

Are Liverpool likely to make a move for Gordon this year?

It was reported that, in 2024, Gordon had his ‘head turned’ by the possibility of returning to the club which released him at 11 years of age, but presently it seems that he has no intention of leaving Newcastle.

His four-goal romp in Azerbaijan yesterday took him into double figures for the current Champions League campaign, a sharp contrast to his tally of three in 20 Premier League games, albeit that penalties comprise 50% of his European haul (Transfermarkt).

His homegrown status and his ability to play anywhere across the frontline would no doubt be regarded as two major pluses among Liverpool’s recruitment team if they were to make a formal approach for him, but it’s unclear just how likely that is to happen in 2026.

Gordon might seem more attainable if Newcastle (currently 10th in the top flight) fail to qualify for Europe next season, although the Magpies would understandly charge a premium for a key player who turns 25 in the coming days.

For now we can probably disregard the idea of the former Everton winger returning to Merseyside for the Reds any time soon, but that isn’t to say it’ll never happen, given the ever-changing circumstances of elite-level football.

You can watch Slot’s full pre-Nottingham Forest press conference below, via Empire of the Kop on YouTube:

Arne Slot previews Forest and points to Pereira factor

Arne Slot previews Forest and points to Pereira factor
Arne Slot previews Forest and points to Pereira factor

Arne Slot has spoken about Liverpool’s upcoming Premier League trip to Nottingham Forest and the complication created by yet another managerial change at the club.

Our head coach addressed the match during his press conference at the AXA Training Centre and acknowledged that preparing for Vitor Pereira’s side is far from straightforward.

“Back then, it was Dyche’s third or fourth game. That makes it a little bit more difficult.

“We only have tonight [Forest’s Europa League match at Fenerbahce] to see if this new manager changes personnel.

“The good thing is they have that game, and the manager was in the Premier League last season.”

The Dutchman was referencing the earlier defeat at Anfield this season and how difficult it is to analyse a team that keeps changing direction.

Slot facing a Forest side in constant transition

Nottingham Forest have now had four different managers during the same campaign.

That instability matters tactically because Arne Slot and his analysts rely heavily on patterns, structure and recurring behaviours when preparing Liverpool’s game plan.

Vitor Pereira, the 57-year-old Portuguese coach, has only just taken training and his first match comes in the Europa League away at Fenerbahce before facing us in the Premier League three days later.

From a Liverpool perspective, that fixture provides valuable information.

Slot effectively confirmed he will study that match closely because it is the only real chance to understand how Forest will set up under their new coach, as well as analysing tactics used at Wolves earlier this season.

Why the Europa League schedule helps Liverpool

(Photo by @NFFC on X)

The Liverpool boss also hinted the timing of the European game could work in our favour.

Forest are juggling survival in the Premier League and progression in Europe, and Pereira himself admitted he cannot drastically change his system while playing every three days.

That is significant for preparation.

Liverpool can analyse personnel choices, formation and pressing approach from that match, something we otherwise would not have had.

Slot also spoke in the same press conference about Liverpool’s attacking numbers returning to normal levels recently, and the Brighton performance reinforced that.

We currently sit sixth on 42 points and the Champions League race is extremely tight, so these matches against lower-table opposition are critical.

The Dutch head coach also confirmed Joe Gomez is ready to start, while Jeremie Frimpong will not be involved this weekend, meaning defensive planning remains important before travelling to the City Ground.

Ultimately, Arne Slot’s message was cautious rather than confident.

Forest are unpredictable, not weak and the late-week European fixture offers Liverpool something managers value enormously before a league match – information.

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Rory McIlroy unhappy with Riviera ‘horrible change’ ahead of the Genesis Invitational

Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images
Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images

Rory McIlroy is aiming to get his 2026 season up and running this week at Riviera, as the Genesis Invitational arrives in Los Angeles.

He won three times on the PGA Tour last year, including a victory at The Masters that completed his career Grand Slam.

He also took home the Irish Open title on the DP World Tour and played a major role in Europe’s Ryder Cup win at Bethpage Black in September.

This year has not started quite as quickly for him, but he will be looking to turn that around at this week’s Genesis Invitational.

McIlroy heads into the Genesis Invitational still searching for his first win of 2026, but his recent form suggests it might not be far off.

Despite strong showings elsewhere, the Northern Irishman has never lifted the trophy at Riviera. In nine starts at the Genesis Invitational, he has only managed three top-10 finishes.

One reason might be that Riviera does not suit every aspect of his game. Even for someone with McIlroy’s wide-ranging skills, there are always courses that do not quite click.

And on Wednesday, when speaking to the media, the world number two made a point of mentioning one change to the golf course that he strongly dislikes.

Rory McIlroy says Riviera has made a ‘horrible change’ for the Genesis Invitational

Photo by Richard Heathcote/Getty Images
Photo by Richard Heathcote/Getty Images

McIlroy has never been shy about giving his opinion, and he was open with his thoughts on one of the notable changes at Riviera this year.

The par-three fourth hole, which was already a challenging 230 yards, has been pushed back to 270 yards for this year’s event.

Asked about the alteration during Wednesday’s press conference, McIlroy did not mince his words.

“I don’t think 4 plays any differently, you’re just hitting a slightly longer club,” he said.

“I actually think it’s a horrible change.”

It is not often players are thrilled about par threes stretching past the 200-yard mark, and this change is unlikely to shift that view.

The design of these long holes can often feel uninspired, and it does not tend to make for the most engaging golf to watch either.

Rory McIlroy shares his views on Riviera’s changes

McIlroy was open about his thoughts when asked why he does not support the new length of the 4th hole at Riviera.

“Well, like 15 percent of the field hit the green last time when it was played at its original yardage at 230,” he began by saying.

“Like if you want it to be a 275-yard par-3, you have to change the apron leading up onto the green. It can’t be kikuyu, it has to be another type of grass that can help you run it onto the green.

“Again, in the right conditions, you try to fly that ball on the green with a 3-iron, it’s going to land – it’s going to finish up on the fifth tee box.

“That’s sort of what I mean by why it’s not a great change.”

Long par threes have become more common recently, but many argue they do not offer much strategic interest.

The most celebrated short holes around: Augusta National’s 12th, Pebble Beach’s seventh and Royal Troon’s eighth all measure under 150 yards.

It is clear McIlroy is not impressed with how Riviera has adjusted its fourth hole, but whether those concerns lead to further changes remains an open question.

Read more:

The best Qarabağ FK snaps as Newcastle United fans flock to Baku

The best Qarabağ FK snaps as Newcastle United fans flock to Baku
The best Qarabağ FK snaps as Newcastle United fans flock to Baku

The Magpies made the furthest trip on record by an English club in the UEFA Champions League, travelling 2529 miles to face Qarabağ FK in their Play-Off Phase first leg.

Thankfully, it was more than a worthwhile trip for all involved as United hit the back of the net six times, with five of those coming in the first-half.

Speaking after the 6-1 win, manager Eddie Howe said: "The victory is very important. The support of our fans is tremendous. It's great that they came to the away game and supported us."

Attention now turns to getting the job done in the second leg, at St. James' Park, next week - but you can relive the emphatic victory with the best photographs from a historic night in Azerbaijan.

Enjoy!

Real Madrid hand UEFA evidence said to confirm racism against Vini Jr.

Real Madrid hand UEFA evidence said to confirm racism against Vini Jr.
Real Madrid hand UEFA evidence said to confirm racism against Vini Jr.

Real Madrid took action following the serious incidents that occurred last Tuesday at Estádio da Luz.

The Merengue club officially submitted to UEFA all graphic and testimonial evidence regarding the alleged racist attacks directed at Vinicius Junior during the Champions League match against Benfica.

Through an official statement, the Spanish club confirmed its active cooperation in the investigation opened by the European entity. The goal is to identify and punish the "unacceptable episodes of racism" that tainted the match in Portugal.

Unconditional support for Vinicius Jr.

One of the key points of the document is the unconditional support for Vinicius Jr. The club made a point of publicly thanking the displays of affection and the unanimous support the Brazilian received from the international football community after once again being targeted by insults.

Real Madrid reaffirms its historic commitment against intolerance. The board guarantees that it will continue working side by side with institutions to eradicate violence and hatred, both in football stadiums and in society in general.

UEFA is expected to analyze the evidence presented in the coming days. Depending on the severity of the reports, Benfica may face financial sanctions or the partial closure of its stadium.

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇧🇷 here.

Bath flanker Hill signs new three-year deal

Bath's Ted Hill
Hill began his career at Worcester Warriors before joining Bath in 2022 [Getty Images]

Bath flanker Ted Hill has agreed a new contract to keep him at The Rec until 2029.

Hill, who can operate in the back or second row, joined Bath in the 2022-23 season following the demise of Worcester Warriors.

The powerful 26-year-old has featured 63 times for Bath and started in both their Premiership and Challenge Cup final successes last season.

"I have loved being part of this club, working alongside an amazing group of players and coaches while also playing in front of the amazing fans at The Rec," said Hill, who has five England caps.

"To extend my contract is really exciting as we continue to push for bigger and better things together as a club."

Hill is the fourth Bath player to sign a new deal with the Premiership champions this week, following Tom de Glanville, Tom Carr-Smith and Quinn Roux.

Ranji Trophy: Jammu and Kashmir dare to dream under pressure – A big leap long in the making

KALYANI: History had barely settled in when the phone rang. A familiar face flashed up on a video call. Minutes after Jammu and Kashmir sealed a spot in the Ranji Trophy final, the team heard from BCCI president Mithun Manhas, a former head of the J&K cricket’s ad-hoc committee. It was fitting. J&K first entered the Ranji Trophy in the 1959-60 season. For decades they were treated as plucky participants, rarely as genuine threats. The transformation into a side that now talks — and plays — like title contenders has had Manhas’ imprint on it.

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“We have done it, Mithun,” J&K coach Ajay Sharma shouted out on the phone, “Mithun and I go back a long way. He made his debut for Delhi under me. I know how hard he had worked for this.”

There is a fairy-tale quality to J&K’s rise as a cricketing power: overcoming odds, brushing aside doubts, and learning the most important skill of all — self-belief. But this isn’t a story built on romance alone. It has also been shaped by method, patience and the hard labour of building a culture.



Former Delhi player Sharma himself admits he struggled to get a grip when he first took charge before the 2022-23 season. “When I joined for the first time, I was handling 38 boys. I was alone then,” Sharma said.

The set-up looks very different now. J&K have a bowling coach in P Krishnakumar and Dishant Yagnik as their fielding coach. These are small additions on paper, significant ones in a dressing room trying to grow into a winning unit.

— BCCIdomestic (@BCCIdomestic)


“Initially it was challenging because it was a very different culture in J&K. It took me around two years to understand these kids. It took time to bond with them,” he said. “I was hard on them initially. But today they see me as an elder brother.”

The first shift, Sharma believes, had to happen in the mind. “These boys only think about white-ball cricket and the IPL. We have players from the state in the IPL. But Mithun, as J&K cricket administrator, had a vision and that is to win the Ranji trophy. Ranji trophy still remains the country’s premier tournament. If you do well here your name goes ahead,” Sharma said.

From there, the work became more deliberate: identify a core and keep backing it. A group of 24-25 boys began to take shape — some, like left-arm pacer Sunil Kumar, emerging through talent-hunt competitions. “It’s the same bunch which has developed as we kept giving them confidence,” Sharma stated.

Alongside confidence came ambition — not the loud, throwaway kind, but some-thing planted carefully and watered over seasons. “I slowly made them understand that you are all talented guys and you are all around 19-20 years of age. You have the game in you so if you apply a little, you can play for India,” he said.

Infrastructure, too, mattered. J&K’s push included pitch preparation, with Sharma noting the state now has both black and red soil pitches, a rare advantage for a side looking to be versatile at home and resilient away.

Preparation became a season-defining theme. “Pre-season is very important and we started playing the Buchi Babu (in Chennai) for the last two-three years,” Sharma pointed out. Facing bigger sides there, and surviving those examinations, helped the group believe it could beat anyone.

“J&K has become a team to reckon with. Everybody is scared of playing J&K now,” Sharma thundered. “We have all bases covered having both quality fast bowlers and spinners. We have won both the knockout matches away from home.”

NHL players' return to Olympics was meant for a day like that

Quinn Hughes

NHL players' return to Olympics was meant for a day like that originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

This is why they opened the doors again to allow NHL players to compete in the men's hockey tournament at the Winter Olympics.

A brilliant day of hockey like the sports world got to enjoy on Wednesday would only be possible with the planet's best all sharing the same ice in Milan.

The day began with a simplicity that didn't foreshadow what was still to come, but it was magic anyway -- Slovakia remains the upstart of the tournament and handled Germany, and Oilers star Leon Draisaitl, comfortably.

MORE: Jake Canter had a 20% chance to live, but he just won an Olympic medal

Then it was the day of overtime.

First, Team Canada was on major upset alert. A blazing slapshot goal on the powerplay from Bruins superstar David Pastrnak, and then a go-ahead goal by the well-traveled Ondrej Palat, had Canada's backs against the wall against Czechia.

That's when Canadiens captain Nick Suzuki was the savior to tie it, and then Maple Leaf-turned-Golden Knight Mitch Marner was the hero with the overtime winner.

Finland went to overtime with Switzerland shortly after, and the Avalanche's Artturi Lehkonen set off the Finnish party with the walk-off goal.

MORE: A dog stole the show at the finish line of cross country skiing

And then there was Team USA and Sweden. For most of the game, the Jets' Connor Hellebuyck stood on his head to keep a 1-0 lead (Red Wings' Dylan Larkin goal) intact.

Sweden equalized in the final minutes, though, and so the United States needed another headline-grabber to advance.

In stepped Quinn Hughes, one of the best defensemen in the world, the Canucks star traded this season to the Wild. It was his time to seize the moment, and his game-winning goal capped an astounding day of Olympic hockey.

The drama can still be great without NHL players. But the level of play, combined with Olympic drama? It simply doesn't get better than this.

More Olympics news:

Joplin girls fall to Carthage; Owens passes 1,000-point mark

CARTHAGE, Mo. — Joplin High School senior Alissa Owens surpassed the 1,000-point career scoring mark Tuesday night, but that wasn’t enough as the Eagles fell 46-43 to the Carthage Tigers at Carthage High School.

Owens finished the basketball game with a team-high 15 points — all in the first half.

The Eagles (8-14) got on the board with an Adwen Barstow drive through the middle of the lane, but the Tigers answered with a short jumper from Zoe Williams.

After a Peyton Cunningham score and an Owens trey from the right corner, Joplin held a 7-2 lead, but Carthage’s Kaidence Stiles hit back-to-back 3-pointers to give the Tigers their first lead at 8-7 with 4:16 left.

After another Stiles score, Joplin’s Cunningham scored on a feed from Ava Wolf and the Eagles took the lead back off a Solei Parker drive to the rim that made it 11-10 with 2:56 left.

Carthage retook the lead with a pair of Williams free throws, but Cunningham also buried a pair from the stripe to make it 13-12 in favor of Joplin.

The Eagles went up by 5 off an Owens free throw and an Owens trey, but Halle Endicott trimmed the lead to 4 with a free throw.

Owens closed out the half with a jumper that gave the Eagles a 19-13 lead heading into the second quarter.

Owens surpassed the 1,000-point mark with a 3-pointer to open the second quarter. That sparked a 7-0 Eagle run that included a Barstow score and a putback by Wolf that gave the Eagles their largest lead of the game at 26-13 with six minutes left in the half.

Endicott stopped the bleeding for Carthage and ignited an 8-0 Tiger run that included a trey by Lynae Merrill off the bench and was capped off by a pair of Williams free throws that made it a 26-21 game with 3:54 left in the half.

Cunningham ended the Tigers run with a free throw, and Owens hit a trey from the top of the key as time expired to give the Eagles a 30-21 lead heading into the half.

Carthage (7-16) pared the lead to a single point after an 8-0 run to open the second half. The scoring spree started with an Endicott trey and was capped off by an Isamar Rodas 3-pointer at the 4:08 mark that made it a 1-point deficit for Carthage at 30-29.

Carthage head coach Scott Moore praised Rodas, his lone senior, after the senior night win.

“This was a great way to send out our senior, Isamar Rodas,” he said. “She had a great game last night against New Heights. She hit that big 3 in the third quarter as Joplin was trying to make a run. I was really proud of her shot confidence to knock that down.”

Joplin’s Ella Kroll got Joplin back on the board to make it a 32-29 game, but Endicott buried a trey at the 3:15 mark to to tie the game at 32.

Carthage took its first lead of the game since the first quarter with an Endicott drive to the basket that made it 36-34 with 2:28 left in the third period.

The Eagles retook the lead off a Kroll score in the paint that gave Joplin a 38-36 lead heading into the final period.

The Carthage defense held Joplin to just 5 points — all by Kroll — in the final frame.

A Williams free throw, followed by a Williams old-fashioned 3-pointer gave the lead back to Carthage at 40-38 with 3:10 left in the game. The Tigers stretched the lead to 4 with a Williams runner in the lane.

Back-to-back buckets by Kroll, including a transition score in the lane off a feed from Ava Dunlap, tied the game at 42 with 1:28 left.

A pair of Williams free throws put the Tigers back up at 44-42 with 42 seconds left. Kroll was fouled with nine ticks left on the clock. Her first shot hit inside the rim but bounced out. Her second attempt was good to make it a 44-43 game.

Williams made good on a pair of free throws in the final seconds to make it 46-43. Ava Wolf heaved a half court shot to the basket as time expired, but the shot bounced off the left side of the rim as the Tigers held on for the comeback win.

Moore talked about how the Tigers were able to hold Owens scoreless in the second half.

“They screen for her a lot,” Moore said. “So we stayed out of our man-to-man for the most part and tried to stay in our zone. That really kind of shut her down.”

Joplin head coach Brad Cox reflected on the Eagles’ loss.

“We let that one go. We didn’t do the things it takes to win a basketball game,” Cox said. “That one hurts.”

Williams, a freshman, claimed game-high honors with 20 points, including 10 in the decisive fourth quarter. Endicott, a sophomore, netted 14 (10 in the third frame) and Stiles, another freshman, finished with 8 points, all in the first quarter.

Williams scored several of her points driving the lane, despite her diminutive frame.

“We should call her Mighty Mouse for the rest of her career because I don’t know that she’s going to get much bigger,” Moore laughed. “But what she doesn’t have in size, height-wise, she has in heart. She does a great job of running the show for us early on in the game, and later on in the game, we put the ball in her hands to get us points as needed down the stretch.”

Owens led Joplin with 15 points. Kroll scored 11 — all in the second half — and Cunningham finished with 7, all in the first half.

Joplin hosts Willard High School on Thursday, while Carthage will travel to Republic High School on Thursday.

Could Lions be interested in Pro Bowl free agent guard?

With Browns guard Wyatt Teller announcing he will not be returning to Cleveland next season, could the Detroit Lions be interested in extending an offer to the pending unrestricted free-agent Pro Bowler next season?

According to ESPN Senior NFL Insider Adam Schefter, Teller made the announcement on Feb. 18 via his Instagram that he would not be part of the Browns organization next season and that he would sign elsewhere.

Browns Pro-Bowl guard Wyatt Teller, who is scheduled to be a free agent this off-season, announced on IG that he will not return to Cleveland and he now will sign elsewhere. pic.twitter.com/9rK3Y1Byly

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) February 18, 2026

With the Lions in need of a quick fix to their depth at the guard position on the offensive line, with Taylor Decker's future still unclear, adding Teller would immediately make an impact for head coach Dan Campbell and new offensive coordinator Drew Petzing.

Specifically, Teller has been known for exceptional run-blocking skills, which would immediately help open the Motor City running game. However, if the Lions were to acquire Teller, it could require Tate Ratlidge to move to either center or right guard.

Given Spotrac's estimate of his market value at approximately $10.2 million per year, he could be one of the high-impact signings that general manager Brad Holmes will likely seek in March if Detroit can fit him into their salary cap configurations.

This article originally appeared on Lions Wire: Could Lions be interested in Pro Bowl free agent guard?

Iowa women's basketball center enters Purdue date after career day

After Iowa women's basketball (20-5, 11-3 Big Ten) walloped Nebraska by a score of 80-67 (16-10, 5-10 Big Ten) from inside Pinnacle Bank Arena in Lincoln, Neb., Hawkeyes head coach Jan Jensen praised the continued growth and development of sophomore center Ava Heiden, who recorded a career-high 27 points against the Cornhuskers.

“Any good post player, if you give them the ball where they need it at the right time, you can be pretty accurate," Jensen said of the 6-foot-4 native of Sherwood, Ore.

"We've been working a lot on that timing. Her athleticism and her foot speed is pretty extraordinary. And I think she's just beginning. I think we can get her even more efficient with a placement and understanding how to post up for one or two passes away."

Along with her 27 points on 12-for-15 shooting, Heiden added 11 rebounds, three assists, three blocks, and one steal to complete her sixth double-double of the season and first since her 18-point, 16-rebound performance against Fairfield on Dec. 30, 2025.

Jensen continued by highlighting her belief that Heiden can become one of the program's greats if she develops an understanding of how opponents guard her and uses her strengths to win battles near the basket.

"Our next steps with Ava as we continue is to really understand how she's being guarded on the floor, down the floor, and start to really think, 'OK, I want it to win. I want it in two passes, and I want it there.'

"When we get Ava to start understanding that, I think she can definitely continue her claim to be one of the great ones," Jensen said.

With the dominant performance over Nebraska, Heiden extends her lead atop the Hawkeyes scoring leaderboard with 16.4 points per game on 62.7% shooting. Given Heiden's trajectory as just a sophomore, the Hawkeyes certainly have a blossoming star who is just scratching the surface of greatness.

Heiden will look to continue her strong play on Thursday night as the Hawkeyes invade Mackey Arena to battle Purdue at 6 p.m. CT.

Contact/Follow us @HawkeyesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes, and opinions. Follow Scout on X: @SpringgateNews

This article originally appeared on Hawkeyes Wire: Iowa women's basketball center enters Purdue date after career day

Jets get creative in Daniel Jeremiah's latest 2026 NFL mock draft

The New York Jets own the second and 16th overall selections in the first round of the 2026 NFL draft. Most mock drafts have Jets general manager Darren Mougey doubling down on defense. That's not what Daniel Jeremiah did in his latest mock draft. The NFL Network analyst got a little more creative.

Jeremiah has the Jets taking Texas Tech EDGE David Bailey at No. 2 overall. The general consensus is the Jets will pick the best defensive player with the second pick, debating between Bailey, Caleb Downs, Arvell Reese, and Rueben Bain Jr. Jeremiah goes with Bailey here.

"The Jets have their pick of the draft’s finest edge rushers here," Jeremiah wrote. "Bailey’s combination of explosiveness and production is the best of the bunch."

Mock Draft 2.0https://t.co/eZJr4NkSH9

— Daniel Jeremiah (@MoveTheSticks) February 17, 2026

Many then expect the Jets to draft a quarterback or another defender with the 16th selection. A defensive tackle to replace Quinnen Williams has been a popular choice, as has Alabama QB Ty Simpson. Jeremiah has the Jets going with an offensive player in Penn State interior offensive lineman Olaivavega Ioane.

"I know quarterback is a huge need for the Jets, but I don’t see a QB worthy of the 16th overall pick this year," Jeremiah continued. "So, they can take the best player available here. I view Ioane as the best offensive lineman in the draft. He can fill the void with the injury-plagued Alijah Vera-Tucker and John Simpson headed for free agency."

Jeremiah raises an intriguing point. The Jets could enter the market for a new starting guard and Ioane is widely considered to be one of the safest overall prospects in the draft as the top-ranked guard.

This article originally appeared on Jets Wire: Jets get creative in Daniel Jeremiah's latest 2026 NFL mock draft

2026 NFL draft: Bills add at potential hole on defense in CBS Sports mock

The Buffalo Bills have plenty of decisions to make during the long haul leading up to the 2026 NFL draft.

Depending on those, the team's defense could end up with a hole at linebacker once the draft rolls around. Two names that could have played their final snap in Buffalo are Matt Milano and Shaq Thompson.

While both have had their promising and impact moments with the Bills, could the team go in a younger direction at the draft? If that happens, CBS Sports made the case for Georgia's CJ Allen to be the replacement.

Holding the No. 26 overall selection, the Bills are projected to take Allen with their first-round pick.

However, if Allen is the move, there could be a decision to make. He's called a "green dot" linebacker by NFL.com. Roaming the middle of the Bills defense in the role currently is Terrel Bernard, who will return next season.

CBS Sports' breakdown on Allen to the Bills can be found below:

It's been a few years since the last one, but CJ Allen is the latest in the long line of Georgia LBs who are smart, can fly sideline to sideline and hit the crap out of you when they find you. He'd be an immediate help to Buffalo's run defense.

This article originally appeared on Bills Wire: 2026 NFL draft: Bills add at potential hole on defense in mock

Team USA vs. Canada: How to watch the women's ice hockey final at the 2026 Winter Olympics today

The U.S. women's ice hockey team will be playing in the gold medal game against Canada at the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics this Thursday. This is the seventh time in history that the two clubs have met in the gold medal game; Canada has won gold in five of those games, while the U.S. has won gold twice. Who will come out on top this year? We'll find out Thursday, Feb. 19 when the game airs live on Peacock and USA.

Read on for a complete schedule of every remaining U.S. men's and women's hockey game at this year's games, a rundown of who is playing for Team USA, and how to watch all the action. And if you want to learn even more about every event at this year's Winter Games, here's a guide to everything you need to know about the Milan Cortina Games. 

How to watch Team USA vs. Canada in the women's ice hockey final at the 2026 Winter Olympics

Date: Thursday, Feb. 19

Time: 1:10 p.m. ET

Location: Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena

TV channel: USA

Streaming: Peacock, DirecTV, and more

Where can I stream ice hockey at the 2026 Winter Olympics?

Every men's and women's ice hockey game at the Olympics, including the women's gold medal final this Thursday, is available to stream on Peacock. 

Where to watch the Team USA vs. Canada women's ice hockey final on TV:

The Team USA women's ice hockey final will air live on USA on Thursday, Feb. 19 at 1:10 p.m. ET.

How to watch Olympic ice hockey free without cable:

Who is on the Team USA men's hockey team?

These are the athletes on Team USA's men's team, including their hometowns and professional teams:

  • Jake Sanderson (Whitefish, Mont./Ottawa Senators)

  • Brock Faber (Maple Grove, Minn./Minnesota Wild)

  • Matt Boldy (Millis, Mass./Minnesota Wild)

  • Kyle Connor (Shelby Township, Mich./Winnipeg Jets)

  • Jack Eichel (North Chelmsford, Mass./Vegas Golden Knights)

  • Jake Guentzel (Woodbury, Minn./Tampa Bay Lightning)

  • Noah Hanifin (Northwood, Mass./Vegas Golden Knights)

  • Connor Hellebuyck (Commerce, Mich./Winnipeg Jets)

  • Jack Hughes (Canton, Mich./New Jersey Devils)

  • Quinn Hughes (Canton, Mich./Minnesota Wild)

  • Clayton Keller (St. Louis/Utah Mammoth)

  • Jackson LaCombe (Eden Prairie, Minn./Anaheim Ducks)

  • Dylan Larkin (Waterford, Mich./Detroit Red Wings)

  • Auston Matthews (Scottsdale, Ariz./Toronto Maple Leafs)

  • Charlie McAvoy (Long Beach, N.Y./Boston Bruins)

  • J.T. Miller (East Palestine, Ohio/New York Rangers)

  • Brock Nelson (Warroad, Minn./Colorado Avalanche)

  • Jake Oettinger (Lakeville, Minn./Dallas Stars)

  • Jaccob Slavin (Erie, Colo./Carolina Hurricanes)

  • Jeremy Swayman (Anchorage, Alaska/Boston Bruins)

  • Tage Thompson (Orange, Conn./Buffalo Sabres)

  • Brady Tkachuk (St. Louis, Mo./Ottawa Senators)

  • Matthew Tkachuk (St. Louis, Mo./Florida Panthers)

  • Vincent Trocheck (Pittsburgh, Pa./New York Rangers)

  • Zach Werenski (Grosse Pointe Woods, Mich./Columbus Blue Jackets).

2026 Team USA Olympic men's ice hockey schedule:

Tuesday, February 17

  • Qualification Playoff: Germany vs. France, 6:10 a.m. (Peacock)

  • Qualification Playoff: Switzerland vs. Italy, 6:10 a.m. (Peacock)

  • Qualification Playoff: Czechia vs. Denmark, 10:40 a.m. (Peacock, USA)

  • Qualification Playoff: Sweden vs. Latvia, 3:10 p.m. (Peacock, USA)

Wednesday, February 18

  • Men's Quarterfinal 1: Slovakia vs. Germany, 6:10 a.m. (Peacock)

  • Men's Quarterfinal 2: Canada vs. Czechia, 10:40 a.m. (Peacock, USA)

  • Men's Quarterfinal 3: Finland vs. Switzerland, 12:10 p.m. (Peacock)

  • Men's Quarterfinal 4: USA vs. Sweden, 3:10 p.m. (Peacock, NBC)

Friday, February 20

  • Men's Semifinal 1: Teams TBD, 10:40 a.m. (Peacock, re-air at 11:50 a.m. and 6 p.m. on USA)

  • Men's Semifinal 2: Teams TBD, 3:10 p.m. (Peacock, NBC, re-air at 11 p.m. on USA)

Saturday, February 21

  • Men's Bronze Medal Final: Teams TBD: 2:40 p.m. (Peacock, USA, re-air at 7 p.m. on CNBC, re-air at 11 p.m. on USA)

Sunday, February 22

  • Hockey Preview, 7:45 a.m. (NBC)

  • Gold Medal Final: Teams TBD, 8:10 a.m. (Peacock, NBC, re-air at 4:30 p.m. on USA)

Who is on the Team USA women's hockey team?

The athletes on Team USA's women's team are:

  • Hilary Knight (Sun Valley, Idaho/Seattle Torrent)

  • Kendall Coyne Schofield (Palos Heights, Ill./Minnesota Frost)

  • Lee Stecklein (Roseville, Minn./Minnesota Frost)

  • Cayla Barnes (Eastvale, Calif./Seattle Torrent)

  • Alex Carpenter (North Reading, Mass./Seattle Torrent)

  • Megan Keller (Farmington Hills, Mich./Boston Fleet)

  • Kelly Pannek (Plymouth, Minn./Minnesota Frost)

  • Caroline Harvey (Salem, N.H./University of Wisconsin)

  • Abbey Murphy (Evergreen Park, Ill./University of Minnesota)

  • Hayley Scamurra (Buffalo, N.Y./Montreal Victoire)

  • Grace Zumwinkle (Excelsior, Minn./Minnesota Frost)

  • Hannah Bilka (Coppell, Texas/Seattle Torrent)

  • Britta Curl-Salemme (Bismarck, N.D./Minnesota Frost)

  • Joy Dunne (O’Fallon, Mo./Ohio State University)

  • Laila Edwards (Cleveland Heights, Ohio/University of Wisconsin)

  • Aerin Frankel (Chappaqua, N.Y./Boston Fleet)

  • Rory Guilday (Chanhassen, Minn./Ottawa Charge)

  • Taylor Heise (Lake City, Minn./Minnesota Frost)

  • Tessa Janecke (Orangeville, Ill./Penn State University)

  • Ava McNaughton (Seven Fields, Pa./University of Wisconsin)

  • Gwyneth Philips (Athens, Ohio/Ottawa Charge)

  • Kirsten Simms (Plymouth, Mich./University of Wisconsin)

  • Haley Winn (Rochester, N.Y./Boston Fleet)

2026 Team USA Olympic women's ice hockey schedule:

Thursday, February 19

  • Bronze Medal Final: Switzerland vs. Sweden, 8:40 a.m. (Peacock, re-air at 12 p.m. and 10 p.m. on USA)

  • Gold Medal Final: Team USA vs. Canada, 1:10 p.m. (Peacock, USA, re-air at 11 p.m. on USA)

Takeaways from Maryland men’s basketball’s 78-74 loss to Northwestern

Maryland men’s basketball is in the midst of the least arduous portion of its Big Ten schedule. But on Sunday, the Terps fell by more than 10 points to Rutgers. 

With a chance to correct its course, Maryland instead faltered again, this time to Northwestern, 78-74. Just five games now remain in its disappointing campaign.

Here are three takeaways from Wednesday’s action. 

Mills vs. Martinelli delivered

Andre Mills and Nick Martinelli set the tenor and pace of the first half. In fact, it’s almost as if everyone else on the court disappeared into the background of Welsh-Ryan Arena. 

Martinelli’s production came as no surprise. He leads the Big Ten in scoring with 22.1 points per game and finished with 29 Wednesday. His scoring was well distributed throughout both halves, and his offense came from various locations on the court.

His first half of 13 points included a 3-pointer near the game’s outset. He operated as the team’s point-forward, often orchestrating the flow of the offense at the top of the key and 3-point line. Martinelli’s skillset and versatility kept Maryland honest, and it morphed into a zone defense to try and confuse and combat the crafty senior.

But Martinelli wouldn’t be tricked. He found a consistent soft spot between the Terps’ two low defenders at the free throw line, making his mark with numerous push shots and floaters.

Mills, meanwhile, almost matched his highest scoring output of the season in just the first half, notching 22 points. He ultimately shattered that number across all 40 minutes, ending with 39. And like Martinelli, Mills made a significant impact both inside and outside the arc. His six 3-pointers were a season-high by two, and he was as effective a finisher at the rim as he’s been all season long.

Where his attacking style differed from Martinelli is that his drives were explosive in nature, and he often bruised his way to the cup. On one occasion in the first half, he even plunged into Martinelli on a beeline to the hoop, sending the forward teetering backwards. 

Martinelli himself, however, proved to be a patient and composed weapon for his team, sinking midrange jumpers and high-off-glass layups. His experience and poise has allowed for the game to slow down in his favor.

Streaky shooting, or bad defense?

Jordan Clayton went 6-of-7 from 3-point range Wednesday. Heading into the game, he was just 17-of-54 from deep. Northwestern also ranked dead-last in the conference in 3-point percentage heading into the contest, but it shot 57.1% on 12 makes against the Terps.

The performance was undoubtedly an anomaly, but was it all the fault of Maryland?

The Terps’ switch to zone defense at points didn’t just allow Martinelli some open push shots. It also gave him free rein to dish out looks or skip passes to perimeter shooters. Maryland, as has been the case at quite a few junctures this season, was slow to react, perhaps not giving much deference to the Wildcats’ shooting abilities.

A few threes came courtesy of offensive rebounding. Ange Ciaravino snagged the team’s only two of the night, but he was quick to redistribute to the perimeter. Northwestern’s swing passing was crisp, too, and Jake West was the beneficiary of a nice feed from the corner that had the Terps rotating late.

But some of the deep range shots were simply a product of stellar individual skill. Martinelli motored a 9-0 run by himself in the latter stages of the second half — the run contained two 3-pointers — that gave the Wildcats the cushion they needed to close it out.

Too little, too late

With four minutes left, Northwestern led by 11. But the Wildcats only won by four, and that’s because Maryland manufactured a commendable comeback effort — albeit far too late.

The principal issue with Maryland’s offense down the stretch was that it didn’t feature Mills enough until the game was essentially out of hand. Before that four-minute mark, the freshman guard had splashed two threes and made a layup in the period. But he was not the centerpiece of the attack, whereas he had been in the opening frame.

Mills scored nine of the Terps’ final 15 points, and a plethora of those came from free throw opportunities. Had head coach Buzz Williams and his staff made it a priority to feed the hot hand, his trips to the charity stripe could have absolutely slowed the game down and forced Northwestern to earn its buckets in the half-court offense on the other end.

As it was, the Wildcats struggled mightily in the last few minutes regardless. After getting 70 points, it didn’t score a single one for the next 3:21, until there was 1:23 left in the game. Northwestern had previously had issues closing games late against opponents, too, falling to Rutgers, UCLA and Iowa by seven points or fewer.

Had the Terps been more cognizant of their dominant scorer, a more interesting end could have unfolded in Evanston. 

Bodo/Glimt 3-1 Inter Milan – Carlos Augusto: “We Conceded Two Goals From Just Two Chances”

Bodo/Glimt 3-1 Inter Milan – Carlos Augusto: “We Conceded Two Goals From Just Two Chances”
Bodo/Glimt 3-1 Inter Milan – Carlos Augusto: “We Conceded Two Goals From Just Two Chances”

Inter Milan wingback Carlos Augusto delivered his verdict on Wednesday’s stomach-wrenching defeat at Bodo/Glimt.

Speaking to Sportitalia via FCInterNews, the Brazilian star expressed his disappointment but insisted that the team must learn from the setback.

Bodo/Glimt staged another Champions League upset, beating the Nerazzurri 3-1 at the Aspmyra Stadion.

Therefore, Kjetil Knutsen’s men have set one foot in the Round of 16, though they still have to navigate a second leg at San Siro.

Meanwhile, Inter surrendered a six-game winning streak last night, as they failed to adapt to the synthetic pitch.

Furthermore, Cristian Chivu had to sub off his headline performer, Lautaro Martinez, midway through the second half due to injury.

As a result, El Toro is now at risk of missing Bodo/Glimt’s visit to Italy next week.

However, the Argentine’s potential absence won’t be an excuse for the runaway Serie A leaders.

Carlos Augusto Offers Verdict on Bodo/Glimt 3-1 Inter Milan Defeat

MONZA, ITALY – AUGUST 12: Carlos Augusto of FC Internazionale looks on during the Pre-season Friendly match between AC Monza and FC Internazionale at U-Power Stadium on August 12, 2025 in Monza, Italy. (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

Francesco Pio Esposito scored to help Inter enter the halftime break on level terms.

However, the visitors fell apart in the second half, conceding twice in quick succession.

Moreover, Chivu’s side failed to recover from that shock, allowing Bodo/Glimt to protect their two-goal cushion rather comfortably.

“We know that teams have struggled here in recent matches, and we did too,” Augusto said. “We were level, and then they scored from the two chances they created.

In addition, Augusto believes Inter can still turn this tie on its head.

“But there are two legs, and we have the return at home, so I think we can still progress,” he added.

Inter cannot afford to dwell on the past, as they must prepare for the upcoming Serie A clash against Lecce.

With AC Milan dropping two points against Como last night, the Nerazzurri could strengthen their position at the top of the table next weekend.

AC Milan 1-1 Como Draw Softens The Blow Of Bodo/Glimt 3-1 Inter Milan Defeat

AC Milan 1-1 Como Draw Softens The Blow Of Bodo/Glimt 3-1 Inter Milan Defeat
AC Milan 1-1 Como Draw Softens The Blow Of Bodo/Glimt 3-1 Inter Milan Defeat

AC Milan handed Inter Milan a huge Serie A title boost last night by sharing the spoils with Como in a 1-1 draw at San Siro.

According to Corriere dello Sport via FCInterNews, Milan’s slip-up eased the impact of Inter’s shock defeat at Bodo/Glimt.

Massimiliano Allegri’s side desperately needed a win in this ‘game in hand’ to stay within touching distance of runaway leaders Inter.

However, Mike Maignan’s epic first-half blunder helped Como snatch away a point, as Rafael Leao leveled the score just after the hour mark.

AC Milan Draw vs Como Soften Inter Milan’s Blow vs Bodo/Gilmt

MILAN, ITALY – JANUARY 23: Lautaro Martinez of FC Internazionale Milano celebrates scoring his team’s second goal during the Serie A match between FC Internazionale and Pisa SC at Giuseppe Meazza Stadium on January 23, 2026 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

Last night’s draw at San Siro left Milan a whopping seven points behind Inter in the Serie A standings.

Therefore, Cristian Chivu’s men are now in complete control of their Scudetto fate.

Furthermore, it came as a consolation for the Nerazzurri after their disappointing Champions League outing.

In addition to suffering a heavy defeat in the Arctic Circle, Inter potentially lost star striker Lautaro Martinez to a long-term injury.

Jadin O'Brien's path: A track star gets a message, and winds up part of the US Olympic bobsled team

CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy (AP) — Jadin O'Brien thought she was being scammed.

The Milan Cortina Olympics — and the sport of bobsled, for that matter — were not anywhere near O'Brien's radar a couple years ago, when the Notre Dame track and field star saw that someone sent her a direct message on Instagram. The message was ignored.

Several months later, the same person slid into O'Brien's DMs again. “We would love to have you tryout for bobsled!!!” That was the entirety of the message.

O'Brien, finally, was intrigued. She replied and asked for information. A month and a half later, in mid-August of last year, she drove 12 1/2 hours from Notre Dame to Lake Placid, New York, to see what bobsled was all about.

And now, she's an Olympian.

It is a story perhaps like none other in these Olympics: A rookie, who has raced only twice in her career, is going to compete on the sport's biggest stage with a very real chance of finding her way to the Olympic medal stand. O'Brien will push for Olympic monobob gold medalist Elana Meyers Taylor — the person who sent those DMs — on Friday and Saturday in the two-woman competition at Cortina.

“It has really been a roller-coaster of events," O'Brien said. "Everything’s happened so fast, but ... I’ve kind of been conditioned to be able to handle new things very, very fast and then perform despite a lack of experience. So, it has been a whirlwind. I could never have predicted my life would turn out this way, but I’m incredibly grateful and I’ve loved every second of it.”

The Olympics have been on her wish list for a while.

The Winter Olympics, not so much.

How she got here

The 23-year-old O'Brien was a star at Notre Dame — the 2023, 2024 and 2025 national champion in the indoor pentathlon, a five-time All-Atlantic Coast Conference first team pick, a 10-time All-American and a winner of at least a half-dozen All-Academic honors along the way. She was 12th in the Olympic heptathlon trials for the Tokyo Games in 2021 and seventh in the trials for the Paris Games in 2024.

Last summer, she was fifth at the U.S. championships. Two days later, she started training for bobsled. She wound up making that drive to Lake Placid, hit the push track and was pushing with — and in some cases, better than — the team's best in less than two weeks.

A star was born.

“It was insane,” Meyers Taylor said. "Not to get too patriotic or whatever, but I think bobsled is one of those traditionally American stories, American dream kind of stories because you can come from nowhere and come in and make an Olympic team. You could come from whatever background and have an opportunity to live your Olympic moment. That’s not true in a lot of sports.”

Oh, O'Brien has a story. It was not always a fairytale. Far from it, actually.

Around the age of 5, the entire demeanor of a bubbly little girl — whose mother, a track coach, would set up makeshift hurdles in the basement of their Wisconsin home and watch Jadin leap over them with ease, clearly suggesting she had serious track potential — changed. And nobody knew why.

She couldn't run. She couldn't smile. She didn't want to be around other kids. Anxiety took over, her mind often drifted to the darkest possible places such as her own death or the deaths of those around her. Her family, devout believers in their Catholic faith, even enlisted the help of an exorcist from their Archdiocese. It took years to figure out the cause.

In time, she was diagnosed with Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal Infections — a rare syndrome known as PANDAS. When she was 10, life started to get normal again.

“My story, with everything I've gone through, is one of resilience,” O'Brien said. “I know I have the drive and the willpower to do some amazing things, and I try to glorify God while doing it.”

There's been a lot of winning over O'Brien's life. But overcoming PANDAS doesn't mean the road has been easy. Her college career was marred by a series of injuries and challenges — badly torn quadricep muscles, hamstring issues, a stress fracture in her leg, a sprained hand (which isn't ideal for someone who needs to throw a shot put in competition), even food poisoning on the eve of an NCAA championship meet.

And then, last month in St. Moritz, Switzerland, her bobsled career took its first very bad turn.

A bad crash nearly changes everything

O'Brien's first crash came in January, during a training run in St. Moritz. She and Meyers Taylor were a few days away from their World Cup race when their sled toppled. All bobsled crashes are severe, on some level.

This one was worse than most.

The front axle came off the sled, all control was lost and Meyers Taylor and O'Brien were being thrown around like crash test dummies. O'Brien remembers not being able to move for a few moments, wondering if she was critically injured. Her season — her Olympic shot — could have ended right there.

They raced four days later.

O'Brien isn't sure how; her back was still extremely sore, and the back is sort of important for a bobsled push athlete.

“It was not easy getting back on the line to race in St. Moritz after that," O'Brien said. "We were both very, very beat up. I decided to put my body on the line for E because I felt that I had the best chance of getting her a top-10 finish. And I said, ‘You know what? Regardless of this helps or hurts me when it comes to Olympic decision-making, who’s on the team, I’m not going to let a regret linger in my mind.’ And so, I chose to compete.”

A week later, the U.S. selection committee met to decide who would race in Cortina. The pilots — Meyers Taylor, Kaillie Humphries Armbruster and Kaysha Love — were all Olympic locks. A pair of push athletes — Jasmine Jones (who'll race with Humphries Armbruster) and Azaria Hill (who'll race with Love) — were pretty much considered to be locks as well. That left three women for one push spot, and O'Brien got the nod.

“I had no idea that I was going to be named to the team. I really didn’t," O'Brien said. “And I remember sitting there and just praying, ‘Lord, if this is your will, please let it happen.’”

Inside a conference room at an airport hotel in Munich, U.S. bobsled coach Chris Fogt announced the pairings. Humphries Armbruster and Jones were the first duo he revealed. Hill and Love were next. And then he said, “Elana and Jadin.”

“My mouth, like, dropped,” O'Brien said.

The track star with the U.S. flag on the wall of her apartment in South Bend, Indiana — someone who spent years dreaming of a Summer Games medal — was headed to the Winter Olympics.

The future

Whatever happens this weekend — a medal is absolutely within O'Brien's reach, especially with Meyers Taylor coming off the monobob gold — the track star expects to go back to track, at some point.

She plans to continue in bobsled as well.

It's amazing how much things have changed for O'Brien in the span of about six months. From answering that DM from Meyers Taylor, to making the Olympic team, to watching her pilot win gold and now getting the chance to compete, it has truly been a whirlwind she never saw coming.

And now, she hopes, it's time to win.

“We have a job to do and so I think once the job is done, once we accomplish what we came here to do, then it’ll sink in," O'Brien said. "I’m very much an advocate for not getting carried away with excitement and staying level. Once we finish our job, then I think it’ll hit way more than it is now.”

___

AP Winter Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

Former Denmark coach Piontek dies aged 85, Danish FA says

Then coach of the Danish national soccer team, Sepp Piontek, looks on during the FIFA World Cup game in Mexico, where Denamrk won 2-0 against Germany. Sepp Piontek has died at the age of 85 after a short illness. dpa
Then coach of the Danish national soccer team, Sepp Piontek, looks on during the FIFA World Cup game in Mexico, where Denamrk won 2-0 against Germany. Sepp Piontek has died at the age of 85 after a short illness. dpa

Former Denmark coach Sepp Piontek has died at the age of 85 after a short illness.

"Sepp will always be remembered as one of the most influential national coaches in the history of Danish football," the Danish Football Association (DBU) wrote on Facebook on Thursday.

Danish television station TV2 had previously reported on the German's death, citing his family.

Piontek played as a defender for Werder Bremen in the early days of the Bundesliga, helping them win the title in 1965.

After injury ended his playing career, Piontek coached Bremen, Fortuna Düsseldorf, the Haiti national team and St Pauli before becoming coach of the Denmark in 1979.

He achieved cult status among Danes when Denmark took part in a men's World Cup for the first time in Mexico in 1986, reaching the round of 16.

He left in 1990 and took further coaching positions including with Turkey and Greenland.

Pedri and Marcus Rashford give Barcelona a boost as Hansi Flick’s side get back to work

PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC - JANUARY 21: Marcus Rashford of FC Barcelona prepares for the warm up inside the tunnel prior to the UEFA Champions League 2025/26 League Phase MD7 match between SK Slavia Praha and FC Barcelona at Eden Arena on January 21, 2026 in Prague, Czech Republic. (Photo by Thomas Eisenhuth - UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images) | UEFA via Getty Images

Barcelona were back in training on Thursday morning after being given a couple of days off by manager Hansi Flick after the disappointing defeat to Girona in La Liga.

And there was good news from the session as well. Pedri and Marcus Rashford were both back in training with their team-mates ahead of Sunday’s clash with Levante.

Pedri has been out for a month but is expected to play some minutes as a substitute in Sunday’s match as he’s reintroduced gradually after a hamstring injury.

Meanwhile, Rashford is also back in action after a brief lay-off due to a knee problem. The only two players now currently sidelined are Gavi and Andreas Christensen.

According to Mundo Deportivo, Flick spoke to his players for an hour before the match as they reviewed the defeat to Girona.

Flick will be seeking a strong response from his players this weekend against a Levante team they beat 3-2 earlier in the season when the two sides met at the Ciutat de València.

Coco Gauff’s 2025 comments about Alex Eala still hold up today

Photo by Robert Prange/Getty Images
Photo by Robert Prange/Getty Images

Coco Gauff and Alexandra Eala are gearing up to face each other at the Dubai Tennis Championships.

Gauff secured her spot in the quarter-finals on Wednesday, coming from behind to beat Elise Mertens 2-6, 7-6, 6-3.

It wasn’t an easy win for Gauff, who had to save three match points before turning things around and closing out the match.

Alexandra Eala followed later in the day with a straight-sets win over Sorana Cirstea, taking it 7-6, 6-4 to move into the quarter-finals as well.

This won’t be their first meeting on tour. They also played together in doubles at the Italian Open a year ago.

Alexandra Eala is learning to manage the spotlight that’s come her way

Photo by Ted ALJIBE / AFP via Getty Images
Photo by Ted ALJIBE / AFP via Getty Images

Gauff was asked after her third-round win at the 2025 Italian Open about who initiated their doubles pairing, and she confirmed it was Eala who had reached out to play together.

One journalist followed up by asking Gauff how much Eala’s recent surge in attention reminded her of what she experienced early in her own career.

Gauff said: “She seems to be handling it super well. There are ups and downs in the sport, but you realise that the media is there to kind of paint that story and make it more interesting, but that shouldn’t be added pressure or anything like that.

“She seems chill. She seems like she’s working hard, so I don’t have any advice for her just because she seems relaxed. And then for me…”

“The only thing I did tell her was that doubles helped me a lot in that space, having some time on court where it’s a little less stressful. So I encouraged her to play when she could.”

Eala has quickly become one of tennis’s most recognisable names, drawing crowds wherever she plays around the world.

The Filipino star has handled the increased attention well, embracing her rise rather than feeling overwhelmed by it. Her ability to stay composed under growing pressure has become one of the standout qualities of her young career.

Big chance for Eala against Gauff

With Coco Gauff’s form far from reliable at the moment, Alex Eala has a real chance to make her second WTA 1000 semi-final.

Eala has been steady all week, while Gauff has looked shaky at times and had to fight hard just to get this far in Dubai.

Looking back at her match against Elise Mertens, the numbers tell the story: 16 double faults and just 43 per cent of first serves going in.

Eala, on the other hand, has been strong on serve all tournament. She’s also been more consistent from the baseline than usual, which could play a big part in this match-up.

But despite those issues on serve, Gauff is still one of the toughest players out there. She never gives up on a point and is always tough to put away.

If Eala can keep hitting cleanly and stay solid from the back of the court, she’s got every chance of taking advantage. That consistency could be what tips this one in her favour.

Read more:

NFL Free Agency: 4 targets Eagles could sign to replace A.J. Dillon

If only we had a crystal ball to predict the future or, at a minimum, a reset button for the wrong decisions. Most probably would have bailed out of the A.J. Dillon idea rather quickly. A 2025 Philadelphia Eagles offseason signing certainly didn't go as planned, and here we are. It's almost time for the NFL's free agency cycle again.

Ask yourselves a couple of questions. Without looking, when was the last time you saw 'Quadzilla' carry the football? How many rushing yards did he have this season? See? You don't know the answer to those questions, do you?

That's the point. Dillon's time in Philadelphia has come and gone with barely anyone noticing. We can count this chicken before it hatches. He probably won't be on the Eagles' 2026 roster.

This team seemingly has enough at the position with Saquon Barkley, Tank Bigsby, and Will Shipley, but let's make things interesting. Let's toss around a few names as potential free-agent signees.

Travis Etienne Jr., Jacksonville Jaguars

So as not to waste your time, we've already priced Kenneth Walker Jr. and Breece Hall out of the Eagles' price range. Travis Etienne Jr. might also be too pricey, but he's certainly fun to talk about. If it were learned that he had a shrinking market, the Eagles could make sense if someone was forced to make an argument. He brings a skill set to the Birds that the offense seems to be lacking.

Tyler Allgeier, Atlanta Falcons

Think about the Falcons' backfield, and you're almost certain to mention Bijan Robinson, and for good reason. If you didn't watch many of Atlanta's games, you're probably unaware that Tyler Allgeier was a good complementary piece.

Allgeier isn't one of those guys who won't go down on first contact, and that could irritate a unit that is already struggling with the prospect of having to tackle Saquon Barkley.

J.K. Dobbins, Denver Broncos

J.K. Dobbins is another of those guys who makes defenders miss tackles. He'd also be less expensive than Allgeier or Etienne. Perhaps the most attractive thing about this youngster is that he doesn't fumble or drop the football. He has logged 448 carries without a fumble over his last four NFL seasons. One red flag: He's coming off a season-ending foot injury.

Rachaad White, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

Again, genuine interest here revolves around White's market value as he plays football's most physically demanding position. He was a habitual fumbler early over his first three seasons, but he seemed to clean that up last year. Still, there's a chance the Eagles could land him for a price lower than they're expecting if they show interest.

This article originally appeared on Eagles Wire: NFL Free Agency: 4 targets Eagles could sign to replace A.J. Dillon

No. 3 Maryland women’s lacrosse comes from behind to bring down Georgetown, 10-7

Maryland Women’s Lacrosse #6 plays University of Virginia #12 for the first time in SECU Stadium on February 14, 2026. Photo by Lauren Epstein/University of Maryland | Lauren Epstein/Testudo Times

WASHINGTON — After a late evening start in the nation’s capital, No. 3 Maryland women’s lacrosse was entirely gridlocked on both sides of the ball. 

The Terps were down 4-1 at the half and gave up two more scores early in the second half. Then, for attacker Kristen Shanahan and the rest of her team, the switch flipped.

“I kind of blacked out…the adrenaline kind of took over,” Shanahan said. “I always knew we were gonna win it, because I had my teammates around me.”

Shanahan scored four goals in the second half to help bring Maryland from the brink of defeat to a 10-7 victory over Georgetown. 

The Terps struggled to grab possession early, and possessions were quick due to Georgetown’s defensive toughness. But the Hoyas didn’t find any success either — zero scoring occurred in the opening nine minutes.

Georgetown attacker Anne McGovern broke the opening stalemate with a limited-window snipe that prompted a quick timeout from Cathy Reese.

Maryland continued to struggle through the remainder of the first quarter, failing to induce turnovers on defense and missing crucial chances on offense. 

After a pair of missed shots from Kori Edmondson and Devin Livingston, a score from Sophia Loschert gave the Hoyas a two-goal lead with less than a minute left in the period. 

A pair of goals from Molly Davies and Gracie Driggs left the Terps confounded and down 4-0 with less than seven minutes left in the half. The Terps were outshot 16-5, by that point, looking physically outmatched on both sides of the ball.

Maryland finally got its first solid look with two minutes left in the half as Keeley Block rifled a shot past Leah Warehime that cut the deficit to three goals. But two missed shots later, the Terps still looked lost as the half came to a close. 

The Terps led in caused turnovers at the half, but misplaced shots and passes underscored an unproductive first half for one of the nation’s top offensive units.

“Our shots weren’t falling. We couldn’t hit our eight meters, we just dug ourselves into a hole.” Reese said.

Defensive lapses saw Georgetown shell goalkeeper JJ Suriano before halftime — her nine saves were all that kept Maryland from an insurmountable deficit. 

And the defensive woes continued just two minutes into the third quarter. A dropped pass by the Terps was unchallenged, picked up and fired past Suriano. Another banger from Loschert extended the Georgetown lead to five goals after another two minutes.

A putback shot by Jordyn Lipkin found the net with 11 minutes to go in the third period, but a stunning save from Warhime nullified a monster shot from Shanahan, holding the deficit at four.

Lipkin’s second of the day came at the inflection point of the quarter, with Shanahan soon adding another to shrink the deficit to two goals. The Terps looked more composed in this half and were able to maintain lengthier possessions through improved positioning behind the net.

Maryland’s backline began to hold its weight as well, as multiple passes were tipped and windows began to close. Driggs fired a shot on a woman-up opportunity with two minutes left in the quarter, but it careered off of Kennedy Major and into Suriano’s welcoming stick. Another block from Suriano as the scoreboard hit zeros held Georgetown’s lead at two with just a quarter to go.

Driggs was awarded her second goal of the game after video review, but quick strikes from Shanahan and Lexi Dupcak tied the contest. Maryland had entirely erased the five-goal deficit. 

With 10 minutes to go, Shanahan drove into the arc and delivered a low shot to give Maryland its first lead of the game. The bench erupted — but it was still anyone’s game.

Then, just two minutes later, Shanahan struck again. The free position score gave the attacker her fourth goal and the Terps a two-point cushion. It was all but over after that.

With four minutes left, LaPointe found the net on a nearly identical no-angle shot to grow the lead, one that Maryland would hold for the remainder of the bout.

Three things to know

1. Come from behind. With the win, Maryland logs its first fourth-quarter comeback since 2023. The drastic turnaround resulted from a complete switch in offensive tactics and increased defensive aggressiveness.

2. Huge strides. After being benched multiple times in 2025, Suriano has emerged as one of the best netminders in collegiate lacrosse. Her 13 saves tonight were a great reminder of her development.

“She’s really taking ownership of her abilities and what she’s able to do out there, and it’s a huge backbone to our defense.” Reese said.

3. Possession was key. Maryland was highly effective on offense in the second half, outshooting Georgetown, 22-9. These opportunities were largely the result of Maryland winning nine of 12 second-half draws and holding on to the ball when it mattered most.

“There’s going to be ups and downs throughout the season…” Shanahan said. “And we were just with each other the whole entire game.”

Phallon Tullis-Joyce: United keeper sends bullish message to rest of Europe

Phallon Tullis-Joyce: United keeper sends bullish message to rest of Europe
Phallon Tullis-Joyce: United keeper sends bullish message to rest of Europe

Manchester United Women have been in fantastic form lately, winning seven consecutive matches.

Marc Skinner’s side impressed with a 3-0 away win over Atlético Madrid in Spain last Thursday.

One of the team’s top performers this season has been American goalkeeper Phallon Tullis-Joyce, and she kept another clean sheet last time out in the Champions League.

Speaking in the pre-match press conference, she revealed the mentality of the team ahead of the match.

Mentality

When asked about how the European campaign has gone so far, she replied, “yeah, it’s going great for us so far. I smiled a little bit when you mentioned people underestimating us — that might ruffle a few feathers in the locker room.”

She paid further compliments to the team Skinner has built by stating, “we have a complete wealth of diversity and variety in our squad. Different players can step up in any game against any opponent. We’re taking nothing for granted in this next match.”

Tullis-Joyce claimed she was very proud of the team to date and assured fans that they would give it their all to make it to the quarter-final stage.

Vinicius Junior racism issue

United’s keeper also spoke out on the desperately sad news of Real Madrid’s Vinícius Júnior being allegedly racially abused during the Spanish club’s game with SL Benfica.

She explained, “you’re also asking the daughter of a black woman, so I’ve been adjacent to the experience of a black woman in society. None of this is a surprise to me.”

Tullis-Joyce added that the situation was “shameful” and that she is working with United’s ‘All Red, All Equal’ campaign to ensure the club is doing everything it can to combat the problem.

Preparation for next match

She was then asked to comment if a clean sheet in the last leg gives her confidence for this match, and she retorted, “I approach each game separately. It doesn’t matter what happened in the past — this is the next game.”

Finally, she revealed her great pride in representing this team and stated, “it’s really special to be a player for the Manchester United women’s team. Being part of the continued history of this club is something I hold very precious. I love giving everything I can for the squad, and I know the girls do too. To continue walking that trailblazing path is really special. I like being part of that.”

Phallon Tullis-Joyce season stats

Source: Wikipedia

Feature image Matt McNulty via Getty Images

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Dybala rules out surgery option, continues regular therapy

Dybala rules out surgery option, continues regular therapy
Dybala rules out surgery option, continues regular therapy

No surgery or prolonged pit stops are scheduled for Paulo Dybala despite reports suggesting otherwise.

Dybala’s latest medical tests revealed no significant damage or injury to his left knee, allowing him to monitor his condition day by day.

Therefore, the possibility of joint cleansing surgery, which would have forced La Joya to undergo a prolonged one at a crucial moment of the season, has been ruled out, at least for now.

The discomfort Dybala experiences when kicking should therefore not require an invasive solution. The medical protocol established by the Giallorossi medical staff calls for the continuation of the conservative recovery plan already underway.

Although the number 21 continues to perform differentiated training compared to the rest of the team, the decision not to undergo surgery should help shorten his chances of returning to action.

According to SiamoLaRoma.it, the objective of Gian Piero Gasperini’s staff remains the same: to manage the workload in order to eliminate the inflammation without rushing the recovery process.

Vinícius case: Real Madrid finally breaks its silence and appeals to UEFA! (Official)

Vinícius case: Real Madrid finally breaks its silence and appeals to UEFA! (Official)
Vinícius case: Real Madrid finally breaks its silence and appeals to UEFA! (Official)

Vinícius case: Real Madrid issues an official statement

Vinícius case: Real Madrid finally breaks its silence and appeals to UEFA! (Official)

Two days after the Prestianni-Vinícius controversy, Real Madrid has finally broken its silence. The Spanish capital club published an official statement this Thursday on its website and social media, declaring that it has submitted all information in its possession to UEFA regarding the incidents that occurred during the match in Lisbon against SL Benfica.

"

Our club has actively cooperated with the investigation opened by UEFA following the unacceptable episodes of racism experienced during this match.

Real Madrid expresses its gratitude for the unanimous support, encouragement, and affection that our player Vinícius Jr. has received from all corners of the football world.

" the club announced.

Thursday Headlines: Kentucky Basketball now among NCAA Tournament Bubble Teams

Kentucky head coach Mark Pope reacts during the first half of a NCAA mens basketball game at Steven C. O'Connell Center Exactek arena in Gainesville, FL on Saturday, February 14, 2026. [Alan Youngblood/Gainesville Sun] | Alan Youngblood/Gainesville Sun / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Just a week ago, things were looking up for the Kentucky Basketball program.

The Wildcats had won 8 of 9 games, including two victories over Tennessee and a win over Arkansas. Fast-forward a week: after back-to-back losses to Florida and a reeling Georgia team, Kentucky is now on Bubble Watch, according to ESPN.

To be fair, ESPN’s Neil Paine still thinks Kentucky is very likely to get into the tournament, but it is no longer a lock like it was a week ago.

Here’s what he had to say about Kentucky.

The Wildcats had moved into “lock” territory in the forecast models after defeating Tennessee on Feb. 7 for an eighth win in nine games. But then a pair of losses to Florida and, on Tuesday, Georgia at home, followed, dipping their odds down to 94% — still very strong, but enough to warrant further Bubble Watching. Their résumé (five Quadrant 1 wins, including three Quadrant 1A, enough to rank 27th nationally in our résumé average) is also still around sixth-best in the SEC, which projects to get nine or 10 tourney teams. So they’re comfortably above the danger zone for now. The biggest concern might be that they have the nation’s toughest remaining schedule per the BPI, with four of five games against Quadrant 1 foes (three against Quadrant 1A).

Kentucky would still be in the field if the season moved today, but looking at the remainder of the schedule, the Cats will likely need to pull out a game or two where they are underdogs to feel confident headed into Selection Sunday.

The Cats still have remaining road trips to Auburn, South Carolina, and Texas A&M, with home games against Vanderbilt and Florida.

The Georgia loss certainly stings, coming in the midst of a difficult stretch of games to end the regular season, but Kentucky has a chance to pick up some major wins during this stretch as well.

Tweet of the Day

Recruitment officially open. With NCAA rules continuing to evolve, I’m exploring all options. Looking for the right program ready to take on the reinstatement process. Let’s work💯

— Kahlil Whitney (@KahlilWhitney) February 18, 2026

A year ago, I would’ve thought this was the craziest thing possible. Now? Not so much.

Headlines

What Kentucky must do to save its season – Herald Leader

What would it require for you to be satisfied with this season?

Losses to unranked teams at home continue to be a problem for Kentucky – KSR

Too many bad losses at Rupp.

Uncertainty remains about Tyler Bell’s status – Cats Pause

Hopefully we see him back on the field soon.

Asia Boone playing big role for Wildcats – Vaughts Views

She’s been playing well.

UK Softball picks up win over Murray State – UK Athletics

Allie Blum to the rescue.

JT Toppin has torn ACL, out for remainder of season – ESPN

A major hit for a Texas Tech team that looked like it could make some noise in March.

USA Men’s Hockey advances to semifinals – Bleacher Report

Quinn Hughes for the win!

The Seahawks are up for sale – Yahoo

I guess a month after a Super Bowl win is a good time to sell.

Most of the internet’s NBA tanking solutions wouldn’t work – CBS Sports

The Lottery Tournament is the most interesting idea, but not sure it’s the best idea.

Steve Lavin won’t return as San Diego coach – NBC Sports

It has not gone well for the former UCLA and St. John’s coach.

North Carolina has bigger problems than Hubert Davis – SI

I wouldn’t expect Hubert to be let go this offseason.

Official: Real Madrid issue statement on racist abuse against Vinicius during Benfica clash

Official: Real Madrid issue statement on racist abuse against Vinicius during Benfica clash
Official: Real Madrid issue statement on racist abuse against Vinicius during Benfica clash

After the deplorable incident on Tuesday night where Vinicius Jr. was subjected to racist abuse by Benfica’s Gianluca Prestianni, Real Madrid have finally issued a statement on the matter.

The Argentine youngster allegedly called the Real Madrid forward ‘mo*key’ minutes after the Brazilian had scored a wonder goal.

While Prestianni and Benfica continue to deny it, UEFA has launched an investigation into the incident, with the Portuguese Government also looking into it

Real Madrid statement

Breaking their silence for the first time since the incident, Real Madrid have stated that they are fully behind Vinicius and have turned over all pertinent evidence of the racism to UEFA to help with the investigation.

“Real Madrid CF announces that today it has provided UEFA with all available evidence regarding the incidents that occurred last Tuesday, February 17, during the Champions League match that our team played in Lisbon against SL Benfica.

“Our club has actively cooperated with the investigation opened by UEFA following the unacceptable episodes of racism experienced during that match.

The statement further read: “Real Madrid is grateful for the unanimous support, backing and affection that our player Vinicius Jr. has received from all sectors of world football.

“Real Madrid will continue working, in collaboration with all institutions, to eradicate racism, violence and hatred in sport and in society.”

Hermoso fully available for Cremonese clash

Hermoso fully available for Cremonese clash
Hermoso fully available for Cremonese clash

Encouraging signs from the Trigoria infirmary ahead of the match against Cremonese.

According to Filippo Biafora of Il Tempo, Mario Hermoso is fully recovered: the Spanish defender has recovered from the foot bruise that had slowed him down in recent days and is ready to resume his place in the rotation.

This return comes at the perfect time: his availability will allow the coach to more calmly manage the disciplinary situations of Gianluca Mancini and Evan N’Dicka, both of whom are currently on a booking and at risk of suspension ahead of the big match against Juventus.

Hermoso’s return isn’t the only positive news for the Giallorossi coaching staff.

Manu Koné has also returned to the squad, scoring a goal from the penalty spot in yesterday’s friendly against Atletico Lodigiani.

Rainbow ball back in EFL anti-homophobia campaign

A close up of Puma's rainbow ball that features a selection of colourful geometrical shapes on a traditional white background
This is the third year the EFL have used the rainbow ball campaign [EFL]

Puma's Rainbow ball will return to the English Football League as part of an on-going campaign against discrimination and homophobia.

The special edition rainbow ball was introduced in 2024 to mark LGBTQ+ History Month and will be used at every EFL game from 20 February until 1 March.

Manufacturers Puma will make a donation to Football v Homophobia for every goal scored with their rainbow ball across the Championship, League One and League Two.

The donations will help support education against homophobia and promote inclusion across the season.

The EFL have released a video to coincide with the campaign which features a Preston North End fan who was charged with a hate crime following homophobic chanting during an FA Cup fixture against Chelsea.

The rainbow ball will also feature in EFL partner EA Sports' FC 26 video game.

"The rainbow ball is a powerful symbol of the values we uphold across the EFL all season long," EFL chief executive officer Trevor Birch said.

"It not only reflects our longstanding commitment to ensuring the League is representative of all its diverse communities, but also reminds us that we all have a role to play in creating an environment in which everyone feels they truly belong."

Canada’s big hope: who could become Stanley Cup champion this year?

Canada’s big hope: who could become Stanley Cup champion this year?
Canada’s big hope: who could become Stanley Cup champion this year?

The last time that a Canadian franchise won the Stanley Cup was way back in 1993, when the Montreal Canadiens took the Los Angeles Kings apart 4-1 in the Finals. Ever since then, a handful of teams have been able to make it back to the big dance, but they haven’t quite been able to get over the finish line.

In fact, in the last two years, the Edmonton Oilers made it to back-to-back Finals – only to lose on both occasions to the Florida Panthers. Some believe there’s a curse in place, whereas others feel as if the Canadian representatives simply aren’t doing enough to maximise their chances.

Regardless of what you believe, it certainly seems like they face an uphill battle. Right now, the Oilers are the favourites from the Great White North with odds of 10/1, and if you fancy backing that, you can see how much you stand to earn with this free bet calculator. Today, however, we want to check out how all of Canada’s finest are getting on so far this season.

Canadian Stanley Cup Contenders: Mid-Season Assessment

Montreal Canadiens – strong possibility

The Canadiens are absolutely flying as one of the leading candidates to take the Atlantic, and while the Tampa Bay Lightning are at the helm right now, it feels like Montreal have the ability to usurp them if they play their cards right.

Ottawa Senators – quite unlikely

Ottawa have been lingering in the bottom half of the Atlantic all season long and even though they have been on the rise in recent weeks, it seems like it’s going to be an uphill battle for them to really contend.

Toronto Maple Leafs – very unlikely

One year, the Maple Leafs look like real contenders, and then the next, they falter – such is the life of being a sports fan in Toronto. At this point, simply getting a positive points differential would be a nice season for them.

Winnipeg Jets – almost impossible

The Jets can never seem to get out of their own way and although it’s not exactly easy being part of the stacked Central Division, they have failed to really make the most of being in the league ever since they were rebranded in Winnipeg.

Edmonton Oilers – strong possibility

Trying to get to the Stanley Cup Finals for a third year in a row is a difficult task for anyone, but the Edmonton Oilers are making it look easier than most. Still, they have the Golden Knights ahead of them in the Pacific, and they won’t go down without a fight.

Calgary Flames – almost impossible

Calgary fans are as passionate as they come but when you are swimming with a lot of teams around and above your skill level in a division like the Pacific, it’s going to be hard to make waves – and they need another year or two of rebuilding before finding their way.

Vancouver Canucks – almost impossible

The Vancouver Canucks are the worst team in the NHL right now and given how tumultuous things have been in that organization in recent years, we can’t picture that changing anytime soon.

Liverpool have a serious problem and Richard Hughes must fix it ASAP

Liverpool have a serious problem and Richard Hughes must fix it ASAP
Liverpool have a serious problem and Richard Hughes must fix it ASAP

Liverpool have a real problem right now and it's one Richard Hughes must fix as soon as possible. New UEFA Champions League data has shown it up.

Think back to Liverpool's great team under Jurgen Klopp and a few things stand out. One of them is simply how well the team meshed together - a near-flawless machine where everyone's respective job complimented one another.

That directly led to maybe the other great skill of that side: they could play any style. That was a team that was happy to have possession up against a deep back line.

A solid midfield allowed for that, as did the full-backs actively wanting to get on the ball in dangerous areas. Liverpool were able to overwhelm teams through sheer numbers.

But above all, the Reds knew they were absolutely lethal on the counter-attack. Teams had to sit deep against them and rarely risk pushing forward because if they did, the sheer pace up front would carve them open.

It was so much that opposition corners were a decent creative outlet for Liverpool. Mo Salah and Sadio Mane just needed the ball to fall their way and they were off - and few could catch them.

That, however, is a lost art at Liverpool. And it needs fixing.

Liverpool's pace problem

Liverpool had pace in the team even just last season. Darwin Nunez and Luis Diaz weren't the most reliable players in the world for them but they certainly delivered raw speed.

But in selling the pair, Liverpool lost that. They've now got essentially no real pace from wide positions, with Salah not as quick as he was and it never being Cody Gakpo's strength.

CIES Football Observatory have highlighted that with data on UEFA Champions League speeds. Liverpool have zero players in the top 20 for wingers and only one in the top 20 for full-backs - Jeremie Frimpong (9th).

So that's their ability to counter-attack summed up. This team just isn't an elite threat in that regard, far from what they once were.

Teams know full well that they can throw people forward against Liverpool as the pace just isn't there on the break to counter. We saw that at Anfield as PSV Eindhoven consistently broke forward to score four.

It's something that, really, should have been sorted in January. That window has now gone, of course, but there's no question that Richard Hughes has got to fix the problem in the summer.

It should be priority no.1, in fact.

Blow for Fabregas as Como’s ultimate star will be banned for Juventus clash

Blow for Fabregas as Como’s ultimate star will be banned for Juventus clash
Blow for Fabregas as Como’s ultimate star will be banned for Juventus clash

Juventus won’t have to worry about the threat posed by Nico Paz when they host Como on Saturday afternoon.

The 21-year-old is considered one of the most exciting stars in Serie A, and already has a queue of top suitors around Europe.

Tottenham Hotspur already tried to sign the attacking midfielder, but to no avail. Many believe that the player is destined to return to Real Madrid, who have the option to bring him back to the Stadio Bernabeu.

Nico Paz ruled out of Juventus vs Como

On Wednesday, Paz gave Como the lead against Milan in a postponed Serie A clash at San Siro. His goal was ultimately worth one point, as Rafael Leao rescued a draw for the home side.

However, the young Spaniard also picked up a yellow card in the 53rd minute, which is his fifth of the season.

Therefore, Cesc Fabregas will have to do without his biggest star this weekend. This is a painful blow for the Lariani, especially when considering the importance of the fixture, with both teams vying for European spots.

Nico Paz and Manuel Locatelli (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

Juventus currently sit 5th in the table with 46 points, just one behind Roma in 4th place. For their part, Como are 6th, four points behind the Turin-based giants.

While a qualification for any European competition would be deemed a historic achievement for the Lombardian club, Juventus cannot settle for anything less than a Champions League spot.

Paz was the Man of the Match of the reverse fixture

When the two sides met earlier in the campaign, Paz ran the show, scoring a goal and providing the assist for another as Como secured a dominant 2-0 victory over Juventus at home.

The young Trequartista has already contributed with 10 goals and six assists across all competitions this season, making him the ultimate attraction at the club.

Nevertheless, the Biancoblu are blessed with a plethora of attacking talent capable of doing the damage in Turin, including Martin Baturina, Jesus Rodriguez, Jayden Addai, Nicolas Kuhn, Anastasios Douvikas, not to mention former Juventus striker, Alvaro Morata.

Free agent number nine target will prioritise move to Barcelona

Free agent number nine target will prioritise move to Barcelona
Free agent number nine target will prioritise move to Barcelona

Juventus forward Dusan Vlahovic has made his wishes clear on where he would like his next destination to be. Reporting in Italy continues to claim that the Serbian striker is keen to move to Barcelona above all destinations available to me.

Vlahovic is out of contract this summer, and there has been no progress with Juventus over a new deal. The Blaugrana are reportedly prioritising the forward position for the summer, as they look to replace Robert Lewandowski, who is also out of contract, but it is not yet clear what space in their salary limit they will have to spend on doing so. Atletico Madrid forward Julian Alvarez seems to be their preferred option, but as things stand, putting together a deal looks difficult.

Vlahovic prioritising Barcelona move

The latest from Italy is that Vlahovic will prioritise a move to Barcelona first and foremost. Tuttosport, as quoted by Sport, say his future will begin to take shape in March, but he is clear on what wants, and has instructed his agents to put talks with Barcelona first and foremost. If Barcelona do not make a move for him, then he is open to talks with Juventus or with Premier League sides.

Image via Tribuna

Deco has held talks with Vlahovic agents

On multiple occasions, it has been reported that Barcelona Director of Football Deco has been in contact with Vlahovic’s agents over a potential deal. Yet the Catalan daily note that he is not top of Barcelona’s shortlist as things stand, and it ‘will be difficult’ for Vlahovic to end up in the Catalan capital.

Earlier this month, Serbia fitness coach Dusan Ilic has tipped Vlahovic to end up at Barcelona this summer. The likelihood is that Barcelona will by choice or by necessity bide their time until the summer to make a call on who to pursue, at which point Vlahovic may well have already done so.

No Celtic return for Ange Postecoglou, Jens Berthel Askou one to watch

No Celtic return for Ange Postecoglou, Jens Berthel Askou one to watch
No Celtic return for Ange Postecoglou, Jens Berthel Askou one to watch

Celtic will have a major decision to make this summer regardless of how the season pans out with the club currently involved in a three-way title battle with Hearts andtheRangers. Interest in the Scottish Cup remains and the club is participating in the Europa League play-offs with Bundesliga high-flyers VfB Stuttgart.

Nicolas Kuhn scores during the UEFA Champions League 2024/25 League Knockout Play-off second leg match between FC Bayern München and Celtic FC at Allianz Arena on February 18, 2025 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Matthias Hangst/Getty Images)

Yet it has been a turbulent season for the Scottish Champions on and off the park. After taking Bayern Munich to the closing seconds of the second leg play-off in the Champions League last season, Celtic failed to push on much to the frustration of the then Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers.

Brendan Rodgers talks to the media after the match. Hearts v Celtic, 26 October 2025. Photo Vagelis Georgariou (The Celtic Star)

His warning to the Celtic Board fell on deaf ears regarding the need to bring in quality additions especially a striker, to replace Kyogo Furuhashi who was sold to French side Rennes in January 2025. And that proved very costly indeed when Kazakhstan Premier League champions Kairat Almaty shocked Celtic in the Champions League play-off. The cost of this folly reached £40m.

Celtic and Kairat Almaty line ups Kairat Almaty v Celtic, UEFA Champions League, Play-Off Round, Second Leg, Football, Almaty Central Stadium, Almaty, Kazakhstan – 26 August 2025. Photo Anikita Bassov Shutterstock

By late October Rodgers was at the end of the road with the Board clearly looking to ’empty’ him which duly happened after back-to-back league defeats at Dens Park and Tynecastle. The Monday after the defeat to Hearts all hell broke loose at Celtic Park, Rodgers was gone and Dermot Desmond, the Irish billionaire who controls Celtic with a 34% shareholding, releasing a long and aggressive rant against a manager who had won 11 domestic trophies out of 13 contested as Celtic manager.

Shaun Maloney and Martin O’Neill at Celtic Park on October 28, 2025 (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)

Martin O’Neill came back on an interim basis after two decades away to steady the ship yet a search for a permanent replacement was to lead Celtic down a very dark road. Frenchman Wilfried Nancy had made a name for himself in the MSL with a gunho approach to football where everyone bar the keeper was meant to throw themselves forward.

It was an unmitigated 33 day disaster with a dozen points dropped in the Scottish Premiership, a Premier Sports Cup final lost to St Mirren and an embarrassing Europa League mauling by Roma at Celtic Park with the Italian side later observing that the Celtic players didn’t seem to know what they were doing.

Celtic Unveil new manager Wilfried Nancy at Lennoxtown Training Centre on December 05, 2025. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

After a New Year defeat to theRangers at Celtic Park it was Nancy’s turn to be emptied. What a mess the Celtic Board were making of the season and the question was who would Celtic would go to next and the answer was to bring back Martin O’Neill for a third stint as Celtic manager and thank heavens for that every Celtic supporter said because they never wanted him to leave five weeks before.

Martin next month will turn 74 and while he hasn’t completely ruled out taking the job on a permanent basis it seems more likely that Celtic will have to look for a new manager once again.

Celtic manager Neil Lennon celebrates with the Scottish Cup after winning the William Hill Scottish Cup Final match between Celtic and Hibernian at Hampden on May 26, 2013. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

Yet Brendan Rodgers had two stints as Celtic manager, as did Neil Lennon and so did Billy McNeill a generation before. Martin O’Neill ended up beating them all by doing the job on three separate occasions so the question many Celtic supporters are asking is whether Celtic will look for someone new, like the impressive Motherwell manager Jens Berthel Askou or will they once again look to their former manager list and go back in for someone like Ange Postecoglou.

Ange Postecoglou lifts the Scottish Cup after the victory during the Scottish Cup Final between Celtic and Inverness Caledonian Thistle at Hampden P on June 03, 2023 (Photo by Mark Runnacles/Getty Images)

Bringing Ange back would certainly tick plenty of boxes as he was loved at Celtic, the football was brilliant to watch and his transfer activity changed Celtic’s fortunes long after his two years were over and he headed to Tottenham to fulfil his lifetime ambition of managing in the top flight of English football.

Unfortunately there is no chance that Ange Postecoglou will be coming back to Celtic but it would certainly be worth taking a punt on Danish coach Jens Berthel Askou getting the job.

Aberdeen v Motherwell Premier Sports Cup 20/09/2025. Referee John Beaton and Motherwell s Manager Jens Berthel Askou during the Premier Sports Quarter Final match between Aberdeen and Motherwell at Pittodrie on 20 September 2025. Photo Stephen Dobson PSI-IMAGO

Ange was asked about a possible Celtic return on the Stick to Football podcast. While he spoke about how much he loved his time at Celtic he stated the obvious that you can see on his highly interesting CV, that Ange never goes back.

“I love Celtic, mate. What a football club. If I was younger, I probably would’ve stayed there longer. I probably would’ve stayed there three, four years. I think I could’ve made progress with them in Europe.”

“In terms of going back, I don’t go back. I just don’t think that’s kind of been my career. Whatever the next step is, it’ll be something new, something I can make an impact on, somewhere I can win things.

Celtic manager Ange Postecoglou lifts the Viaplay Cup with teammates trophy following victory in the Viaplay Cup Final between theRangers and Celtic at Hampden Park on February 26, 2023. (Photo by Ian MacNicol/Getty Images)

“It was a great experience. To be within a community that’s just so passionate, it’s crazy how passionate they are about their football club. I was fortunate we had success, it’s a positive experience. But I loved every minute of it. I look back on it fondly.

“I won’t go back, I don’t think that’s, kind of, how my career’s played out.”

So the next Celtic manager will not be Ange Postecoglou, it might be Martin O’Neill but that’s a long shot but the smart money should be going on Jens Berthel Askou.

Celtic in the Thirties by Matt Corr. Click on image to order

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Feb 19 2026, 8:56

New Lazio Signing Set for Debut After Impressing Sarri in Training

New Lazio Signing Set for Debut After Impressing Sarri in Training
New Lazio Signing Set for Debut After Impressing Sarri in Training

Lazio manager Maurizio Sarri is reportedly growing fond of Adrian Przyborek, who joined the club in recent weeks.

Adrian Przyborek to Make His Lazio Debut Against Cagliari?

After unblocking their market in late December, the Biancocelesti squad underwent a mini-overhaul in the middle of the season, with four players departing, and five new signing joining the first team. Daniel Maldini and Kenneth Taylor have already become regular starters, while Petar Ratkov has mostly been an option off the bench.

Adrian Przyborek (Photo by Marco Rosi – SS Lazio/Getty Images)

As for the second-choice goalkeeper Edoardo Motta, he will have to bide his time before earning his chance. On the contrary, Przyborek’s opportunity could come sooner rather than later, as multiple sources in the Italian media, including Il Messaggero and La Lazio Siamo Noi, reveal that the teenager has been winning over Sarri on the training ground.

Toma Basic & Fisayo Dele-Bashiru Could Be Dropped

These sources believe that the 19-year-old is already in contention for a place against Cagliari on Saturday. Despite his return to training, Toma Basic is still struggling with pain, so it remains to be seen if he’ll be fit enough to play this weekend. On the other hand, Fisayo Dele-Bashiru has failed to impress Sarri in his recent outings, which provide an opening for Przyborek.

Why Przyborek Can Be an Important Player for Lazio

The teenager is a playmaker who originally plays as an attacking midfielder. Nevertheless, he will have to adjust to a box-to-box role in Lazio’s current 4-3-3 formation. The creative Pole will try to restore the flair that has been missing in the Aquile’s midfield since Luis Alberto’s departure in 2024.

But it remains to be seen if Sarri is willing to entrust him with a starting role, or will instead introduce him in the second half.

🚨 Real Madrid have handed UEFA evidence of racist abuse towards Vinicius

🚨 Real Madrid have handed UEFA evidence of racist abuse towards Vinicius

Real Madrid has taken action following the serious incidents that occurred last Tuesday at the Estádio da Luz.

The Madrid club has officially submitted to UEFA all photographic evidence and testimonies regarding the racist attacks directed at Vinicius Junior during the Champions League match against SL Benfica.

In an official statement, the Madrid club confirmed its active cooperation with the investigation opened by the European body. The aim is to identify and sanction the “unacceptable racist incidents” that marred Tuesday evening.


The Real Madrid Statement

Real Madrid C. F. announces that today it has submitted to UEFA all available evidence regarding the incidents that occurred on Tuesday, February 17, during the Champions League match our team played in Lisbon against SL Benfica.

Our club has actively cooperated with the investigation opened by UEFA following the unacceptable racist incidents that took place during this match.

Real Madrid thanks everyone in the football world for the unanimous support, backing, and affection shown to our player Vinicius Jr.

Real Madrid will continue to work, in collaboration with all institutions, to eradicate racism, violence, and hatred in sport and in society.


UEFA is expected to review the evidence provided in the coming days. Depending on the severity of the reported events, Benfica could face heavy financial penalties or a partial closure of its stadium.

This article was translated into French by artificial intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸  here.

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇫🇷 here.

Matt Boldy reveals Team USA wanted Quinn Hughes to take the Olympics game-winner

Matt Boldy reveals Team USA wanted Quinn Hughes to take the Olympics game-winner originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Everyone was on the edge of their seats when Team USA headed to overtime against Sweden. On paper, these are the two most stacked teams with NHL players so it came to no one's surprise that it went down the wire. In a pool of the greatest men's hockey players in the world, Matt Boldy and the rest of the squad knew who the puck would go to. It was none other than his Minnesota Wild teammate, Quinn Hughes.

Wild star's heroics at Milano Cortina was schemed

Oftentimes, hockey devolves into a game of instinct when playing in overtime. After all, whoever scores first wins the game and every player on the ice becomes relentless in their pursuit of the puck. Boldy has been playing alongside Hughes with the Wild for a while. He knew that the pass had to go to his defenseman. More than that, all of Team USA would be happy with him taking the game-winner because of Hughes' clutch factor despite being on the ice for a long time, via Nicholas Costonika of NHL.com.

“Get it to Quinn,. That’s usually the game plan when he’s out there. He’s so talented, not only to create shots but to create lanes and chances. I think the biggest thing is, he wants the puck. He wants to have it and make a difference, and I think that’s what makes him so great. Glad he’s on our team. He’s an absolute animal, the guy you want to have the puck, and he stepped up big," Boldy said about the situation.

Lo and behold, their team chemistry in the Wild system translated well into the Olympics. More than that, Hughes has been insane for Coach Sullivan's Team USA too. He has one goal to go along with six assists at Milano Cortina.

The next hurdle to their Olympics gold medal hopes are Slovakia. Will they be able to ride this momentum for another Miracle on Ice about 46 years later?

More NHL and Olympics Hockey News:

Early playing time is a focal point for elite 2027 5-star OT

Texas A&M is known for elite offensive line play going back 20-plus seasons, and under third-year head coach Mike Elko, nothing has changed, as he'll send five veteran O-linemen to the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine, joining a nation-leading 13 players. This week, Elko and his staff have secured several key official visits in the 2027 recruiting class, including five-star offensive tackle Kennedy Brown.

Among the "elite" blue-chip offensive line prospects in the 2027 class, Kennedy Brown and the No. 1-ranked offensive tackle, Mark Mathews, are 1A and 1B for most teams, while Brown has the slight edge from a versatility standpoint. However, Mathews has the size advantage at 6'6" and over 300 pounds, and the Aggies are continuing to make headway with the Florida native.

Mike Elko has yet to secure an official visit. Mathews stated at the start of the year that an OV to College Station is likely in the works after his unofficial visit to Texas A&M back in early October. After landing former five-star offensive lineman Lamont Rogers in the 2025 signing class, O-line coach Adam Cushing is the right man to lead the charge.

Speaking with On3's Chad Simmons earlier this week, Mathews discussed his standing with Miami, Georgia, and Texas A&M, and while the Hurricanes remain in the lead, the incoming St. Thomas Aquinas HS senior continues to communicate with the Aggies coaching staff and will heavily consider Texas A&M moving forward.

“It’s just that feeling. I stepped on campus, I really do like it. The coaching staff — from coach (Adam Cushing), coach (Deveonte) Mackey, coach (Wisly Desire), even coach Elko,” Matthews stated about his A&M interest. “My family likes A&M, I like A&M, we’ll just see where this road goes.”

Regarding his immediate playing future, like Kennedy Brown, Mark Mathews is talented enough to start or rotate in as a freshman. While Lamont Rogers seldom saw the field during the 2025 season, that was mainly due to the veteran players in front of him. Looking ahead to the 2027 season, Mathews would likely contend for a starting tackle spot.

“(A&M) wants to bring me in as a guy who can start early. That’s what they’ve told me from the jump and that’s something I want to do,” Mathews said.

Early playing time is an important selling point among all three programs that Mathews will consider, and while Miami and Georgia will likely offer the same opportunity, it's important to note that Mathews, and every other 2027 offensive line prospect, will watch three, four, or possibly all five Texas A&M O-linemen be selected in the 2026 NFL Draft.

Contact/Follow us @AggiesWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Texas A&M news, notes and opinions. Follow Cameron on X: @CameronOhnysty.

This article originally appeared on Aggies Wire: Texas A&M continues to make strong push for 2027 5-star Mark Mathews

Bucketheads Podcast: The Buckeyes play their best game of the season as a trip to East Lansing looms

Bucketheads” is LGHL’s men’s basketball podcast, hosted by Connor Lemons and Justin Golba. In every episode, they give you the latest scoop on the Ohio State Buckeyes and everything else happening in college hoops.


Subscribe: RSS | Apple | Spotify | Google Podcasts | iHeart Radio

On episode 191 of the Bucketheads Podcast, Connor and Justin are back to discuss the Buckeyes going 1-1 last week, but are coming off their best win of the season after beating Wisconsin 86-69 on Tuesday night.

After a disappointing loss to No. 15 Virginia in Nashville, Ohio State bounced back and beat No. 24 Wisconsin handily at home. What was the difference between the two games and how did the Buckeyes put the Badgers away?

After that, we preview a huge matchup Sunday at Michigan State and have a bubble discussion. We also make our predictions for where the Buckeyes will finish and a PSA for Bruce Thornton day.

Remember to like and subscribe to the podcast wherever you listen, leave a comment, and review! We have episodes every Thursday morning.


Connect with the Podcast:
Twitter: @BucketheadsLGPN

Connect with Connor:
Twitter: @lemons_connor

Connect with Justin:
Twitter: @justin_golba

Share your best story about meeting a Lions player

DETROIT, MI - DECEMBER 04: Detroit Lions wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown (14) signs autographs following the end of the Detroit Lions versus the Jacksonville Jaguars game on Sunday December 4, 2022 at Ford Field in Detroit, MI. (Photo by Steven King/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

For as much as we enjoy watching Detroit Lions players on the field, there’s something special about meeting these players off the field. After all, they’re just people. And seeing another side of them can really paint a fuller picture and deepen our respect for them. Score a touchdown on the field in a critical moment, and you’ll gain a fan. Take a moment out of your personal life to make quick conversation, sign an autograph, or take a picture, and you’ll have that fan for life.

Or maybe some of you have an even greater story. Maybe a player went out of their way to do something awesome for you. Regardless, I’d love to hear some great stories about meeting a Lions player out in public.

So today’s Question of the Day is:

What is your best story of meeting a Lions player in public?

My answer: Obviously, I encounter a lot of Lions players these days, but back when I was a kid, I had a brief, unforgettable (although slightly embarrassing) encounter with Barry Sanders.

In some department store inside Somerset Mall, I spotted him. Immediately, I froze. I was too shocked and frightened to do anything about it. I let him walk right by me and out of the store. But I stared at him the whole time.

Eventually, I told my dad about it, and he immediately sprinted for the exit. There, he apparently saw Barry kissing his girlfriend at the time, accidentally interrupting them to say hi. Obviously, it wasn’t the time to grab an autograph and it was before cell phone cameras, so the only proof of the encounter is our memory of the awkward moment.

Now it’s your turn! Share your best stories about meeting Lions players out in real life!

Where Are Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan Now? Inside Their Lives 32 Years After Their Infamous Figure Skating Scandal

Nancy Kerrigan in 2017; Tonya Harding in 2018. Rodin Eckenroth/Getty ; George Pimentel/WireImage
Nancy Kerrigan in 2017; Tonya Harding in 2018.

Rodin Eckenroth/Getty ; George Pimentel/WireImage

NEED TO KNOW

  • Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan were figure skating rivals in the early '90s
  • Kerrigan was attacked with a baton ahead of the 1994 Winter Olympics — and Harding was later convicted of conspiracy to hinder prosecution's investigation into the incident
  • The women have not spoken since the attack

Nancy Kerrigan’s 1994 attack became one of the most shocking moments in sports history.

On Jan. 6, 1994, Kerrigan was brutally struck on the lower right thigh with a metal baton at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships — just seven weeks before the Winter Olympics in Norway.

It was later revealed that fellow American skater Tonya Harding's ex-husband, Jeff Gillooly, and her bodyguard, Shawn Eckardt, conspired to hire Shane Stant to attack Kerrigan. Despite her injury, Kerrigan famously went on to compete in the 1994 Games, where she nabbed the silver medal.

Though Harding long disputed her involvement, she was eventually convicted of conspiracy to hinder prosecution's investigation into the incident. She received three years probation, 500 hours of community service and a $160,000 fine — and was ultimately banned from the U.S. Figure Skating Association for life.

Though more than three decades have passed, the ordeal continues to loom large in pop culture — most notably in the 2017 biopic I, Tonya, which starred Margot Robbie as Harding.

So, where are Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding now? Here’s everything to know about the former figure skating rivals — and where life has taken them today.

Where is Nancy Kerrigan now?

Nancy Kerrigan in 1994. MICHAEL SAMOJEDEN/AFP via Getty
Nancy Kerrigan in 1994.

MICHAEL SAMOJEDEN/AFP via Getty

Since the attack, Kerrigan has gotten married, welcomed children and continued working in the figure skating community.

She wed her agent, Jerry Solomon, in 1995. They've since welcomed three kids together: Matthew, Brian and Nicole.

Kerrigan was inducted into the Figure Skating Hall of Fame in 2004 and has even served as a special correspondent during several Olympic Games. She returned to the spotlight in 2017, competing on season 24 of Dancing with the Stars alongside Artem Chigvintsev, where she made it to week seven in the popular television competition.

Although she enjoyed the experience, Kerrigan told PEOPLE in 2017 that her No. 1 focus will always be her family. “My job is being with my kids after school and asking them how their day was," she said at the time.

In December 2023, Kerrigan released her first children's book, Stronger Than She Thinks. The book follows an 8-year-old aspiring skater named Nancy as she puts in the work and dedication to master her first jump — the axel.

Kerrigan has continued to skate. During the 2025 holiday season, she took part in Holiday Spectacular on Ice atThe Gateway Playhouse in Bellport, N.Y.

Where is Tonya Harding now?

Tonya Harding in 1994. AP Photo/Jack Smith
Tonya Harding in 1994. AP Photo/Jack Smith

Life immediately post-scandal proved difficult for Harding.

She and Gillooly divorced in 1993, but reconciled by 1994 and later released a sex tape together. She was also arrested twice. In 2000, she was arrested after she hit her partner, Darren Silver, in the face with a hubcap and punched him repeatedly, per The New York Times, and was later sentenced to three days in Clark County jail. Two years later, she received five months of probation for failing a sobriety test after she crashed her pickup truck into a ditch, according to CNN.

That year, she appeared on Fox’s Celebrity Boxing, competing against Paula Jones, the former Arkansas state employee who sued former President Bill Clinton for sexual harassment.

In 2010, Harding wed Joseph Jens Price. The couple welcomed a son the next year, according to The Oregonian. Her friend Don Horn told the newspaper at the time, “She’s always wanted a baby. She was told she could never have a child ... and guess what? It really is a miracle, and she really is very happy.”

Harding has resurfaced in the public eye from time to time. Following the release of I, Tonya in 2017, the athlete decided to openly challenge the incriminating portrayals she faced over the years.

"The media had me convicted of doing something wrong before I had even done anything at all,” she told ABC during her 2018 special Truth and Lies: The Tonya Harding Story. "I am always the bad person. Is it a challenge from the Lord to see how far I can be pushed until I break and become nothing? You can’t push me that far anymore, because I have been nothing and I have been nothing several times."

Like Kerrigan, Harding competed on Dancing with the Stars, ultimately appearing two seasons later in 2018 alongside Sasha Farber. She came in third place, losing out to Adam Rippon.

The following year, she won season 16 of Worst Cooks in America: Celebrity Edition, earning $25,000 for the charity of her choice, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.

Harding said she gained many new fans after her return to the spotlight, but remains a busy working mom. "My family and I are doing good," she told PEOPLE in January 2024. "For the past year, I have been working as a custodian for two businesses that are part of one corporation."

As for the 1994 incident, she says, "I'm surprised that anyone is still interested in the incident from 30 years ago, especially considering there are so many problems in our country which concern us all, and I was only charged with hindering prosecution for not coming forward soon enough."

Have Kerrigan and Harding spoken since the incident?

Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan. Andreas Altwein/AP
Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan. Andreas Altwein/AP

Harding and Kerrigan have never mended their relationship. Kerrigan told ABC in 2017 that she saw Harding at an event in 1998, but they didn’t speak to each other. She also noted that she never received a “direct” apology from Harding.

But, Kerrigan asked, “Does it matter, at this point?"

Read the original article on People

Vinícius affair: violent attack on José Mourinho

Vinícius affair: violent attack on José Mourinho
Vinícius affair: violent attack on José Mourinho

Vinícius affair: English press erupts against Mourinho

Vinícius affair: violent attack on José Mourinho

The Vinícius Junior case continues to spark reactions far beyond Spain and Portugal. After the Benfica-Real Madrid clash, José Mourinho's statements—intended to ease tensions surrounding accusations of racism—ignited a media firestorm in England.

Vinicius should not celebrate like that. The greatest person in this club's history is black, that's Eusebio. This club is not racist.

These remarks were considered clumsy and inappropriate by parts of the British press.

According to the Daily Mail

This harsh indictment only adds more fuel to the fire.

The club JJ Spaun wouldn’t let the USGA have after winning the US Open

Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images
Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images

After winning the biggest tournaments in the world, players are often asked to donate one of the clubs that helped them to the victory.

Augusta National received Rory McIlroy’s seven iron, which hit some of his most iconic shots on his way to winning The Masters in 2025. Every Masters winner since 1934 has donated a club, starting with Horton Smith’s putter.

The same tradition applies to the US Open, as players donate clubs to the USGA after winning America’s national open. The event was unexpectedly won by JJ Spaun in 2025, who secured his first major win after holing a long putt on the 72nd hole.

He was asked to donate a club to the USGA to commemorate the win, but Spaun turned down their first request and instead sent them a different club!

Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images
Photo by Andy Lyons/Getty Images

The club JJ Spaun refused to give the USGA after US Open win

The USGA asked Spaun for his putter, which drained the iconic US Open-winning putt on the 18th green at Oakmont. But Spaun said no, because he wasn’t finished using it yet!

Speaking before the Genesis Invitational, he said, “Yeah, they asked for — well, first, my putter.

He continued, “Yeah, I said unfortunately I can’t. That thing is not ready to be retired, especially after that putt. The second probably most valuable club, I think, was my driver, and I actually had switched to a more new head, meaning, like, it was probably getting close to its limit.

“It ended up being kind of unusable anyway, so I donated that, and I think they were pretty happy.”

Spaun’s driving accuracy was a cut above the field at Oakmont, so it’s a worthy club to donate. There’s something special about a player’s relationship with their putter when they’re rolling it well, so there’s no way he was giving that up!

JJ Spaun says why it’s harder to make the PGA Tour now

Spaun fought tooth and nail to make his name on the PGA Tour, almost losing his tour card in 2024. He survived the scare and went on to have the best season of his PGA Tour career.

But if Spaun had struggled this year instead of in 2024, he might not have kept his card. The number of fully exempt places had been reduced to 100, down from 125, so it’s harder than ever to get on the tour and stay on it.

Spaun spoke about these challenges for players: “I would have to say it’s harder now.

“But we’re ultimately trying to make this the most competitive tour in the world, and I don’t know what to say as far as what they’re planning to do with developmental tours and the Korn Ferry being maybe a bigger stage, not so much as like a developmental tour for the PGA Tour.

“But it’s definitely more competitive now. Kids are just so strong and good compared to how it was 15 years ago, and that’s just generation. Generation to generation, everyone is just getting bigger and better, stronger; there’s more technology, there’s more learning to make golfers better.

“I don’t know if the pathway necessarily is harder, but it’s just, I think, harder in general to make it to the Tour because golf is such a competitive sport now.”

Making the PGA Tour more exclusive is ultimately better for the product, but it’s hard to say how many future talents like Spaun will never get the same opportunity to develop later in their careers because of this change.

Bodo/Glimt 3-1 Inter Milan – Cristian Chivu’s Starting Lineup Changes Backfire On Nerazzurri

Bodo/Glimt 3-1 Inter Milan – Cristian Chivu’s Starting Lineup Changes Backfire On Nerazzurri
Bodo/Glimt 3-1 Inter Milan – Cristian Chivu’s Starting Lineup Changes Backfire On Nerazzurri

Bodo/Glimt pulled off a stunning 3-1 home win over Inter Milan in the first leg of their Champions League playoff tie.

According to Tuttosport via FCInterNews, Cristian Chivu’s tactical changes failed to come to fruition.

With several first-team stars, including Hakan Calhanoglu and Denzel Dumfries, ruled out, Chivu had to make changes to his starting lineup.

Furthermore, the 45-year-old decided to give several overused players some rest, leaving in-form Piotr Zielinski on the bench.

In addition, Francesco Acerbi got the nod in defense ahead of Yann Bisseck.

Bodo/Glimt Catch Mixed Inter Milan Lineup Off Guard

MILAN, ITALY – OCTOBER 04: Henrikh Mkhitaryan of FC Internazionale looks on during the Serie A match between FC Internazionale and US Cremonese at Giuseppe Meazza Stadium on October 04, 2025 in Milan, Italy. (Photo by Marco Luzzani/Getty Images)

Chivu’s adjustments failed to pay off, as Bodo/Glimt exploited all the gaps in Inter’s reshuffled lineup.

Indeed, except for Matteo Darmian, who excelled on the right wing, all other makeshift solutions failed to live up to the billing.

Acerbi couldn’t adapt to the synthetic pitch, often looking a step behind his rivals.

Meanwhile, Henrikh Mkhitaryan delivered a bleak performance in the middle of the park.

Despite getting on the board, Francesco Pio Esposito’s overall display fell short of expectations.

Quay Walker is the most polarizing free agent in 2026

GREEN BAY, WISCONSIN - DECEMBER 07: Quay Walker #7 of the Green Bay Packers before game against the Chicago Bears at Lambeau Field on December 07, 2025 in Green Bay, Wisconsin. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I’ve now added 17 lists of free agency rankings to our consensus free agency board, and something is becoming increasingly clear: The most polarizing player in 2026 is Green Bay Packers linebacker Quay Walker.

I don’t want to turn this into a math lesson, but just know that the larger the standard deviation is for a player, the more varied the rankings of a player are. Among the top-50 free agents, only seven other players even have half of the standard deviation that Walker’s rankings carry.

Below are the five guys who are the most polarizing at the top of this free agency class:

Most Polarizing Top-50 Free Agents

  1. Quay Walker, LB, Packers (41.9 standard deviation in free agent rankings)
  2. Boye Mafe, EDGE, Seahawks (37.3)
  3. John Franklin-Myers, iDL, Broncos (29.5)
  4. Braden Smith, T, Colts (28.8)
  5. Coby Bryant, S, Seahawks (26.9)

And here are the least polarizing players:

Least Polarizing Top-50 Free Agents

  1. George Pickens, WR, Cowboys (0.7)
  2. Trey Hendrickson, ED, Bengals (1.3)
  3. Tyler Linderbaum, C, Ravens (2.5)
  4. Jaelan Phillips, EDGE, Eagles (3.6)
  5. Mike Evans, WR, Buccaneers (7.7)

Unsurprisingly, the top 11 least-polarizing players in the top 50 all come from the top 13 ranked players in the class. Everyone can pretty much agree that the players at the tippy top of this class, the players who are most likely to be re-signed before hitting the open market, are good. After that, the rankings get increasingly volatile.

Let’s take a look at who ranked Walker at which slot on their free agency boards.

Quay Walker Free Agency Rankings

  • FanSided: 9th
  • CBS – Podell: 10th
  • The Ringer: 12th
  • Sports Illustrated: 12th
  • ESPN: 13th
  • Bleacher Report: 15th
  • For the Numbers: 18th
  • FOX Sports: 22nd
  • Pro Football Network: 21st
  • NFL Trade Rumors: 53rd
  • Sporting News: 57th
  • The Athletic: 59th
  • CBS – Prisco: 70th
  • Spotrac: 73rd
  • Walter Football: 138th
  • Pro Football Focus: 139th
  • Yahoo Sports: Unranked (of 25)

That’s right, he’s somewhere between the 9th and 139th free agent in the class, according to analysts. That’s a pretty massive range.

Here’s what CBS’s Garrett Podell, who ranked Walker as the 10th-best player in free agency, had to say about the 25-year-old linebacker:

The former first-round pick is a versatile, middle-of-the-field chess piece in Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator Jeff Hafley’s scheme. His build, 6-4 while weighing 241 pounds, is perfect for today’s NFL where inside linebackers are now asked to be significant coverage players. At his age and with his skill set, Walker will have a robust free agent market.

Compare that to Pro Football Focus, which had him ranked 139th:

Walker’s time in Green Bay didn’t match his first-round selection with a 46.0 overall PFF grade through four seasons. He particularly struggled in coverage in 2025, permitting 653 yards when targeted ‚ the fifth-most for any linebacker. Teams approaching Walker could be interested in his age (25) and low missed tackle rate, but his collegiate abilities have yet to fully translate at the next level.

PFF’s rankings aren’t perfect, as cornerback Alontae Taylor, who would have ranked as the 27th-best player in the class without their data point, was left entirely off their ranking of the top 350 free agents in the class (I’m not sure if this was a mistake or what), but their data is worth considering.

For what it’s worth, NFL Pro, the league-funded service that uses player tracking data, had Walker giving up 386 yards in the air this year, the 17th-most by a linebacker. Notably, Jamien Sherwood, who got a surprising $15 million per year extension just before free agency last year, was eighth in the league with 480 yards surrendered. In the agent community, the hope has been that Sherwood’s $15 million per year deal will serve as a floor at the position for full-time starters, in the same way that Dan Moore Jr.’s $20.5 million per year deal in 2025 now serves as the floor for starting offensive tackles, since Moore led the NFL in sacks allowed before he got that contract.

If $15 million per year sounds crazy for an average starting linebacker, the market for average slot defenders is now north of $13 million per year, and that’s for part-time players. Cash spending is going up, consistently beating the salary cap (which was rare before the pandemic), because teams are learning how to manipulate the cap better. The biggest beneficiaries of this spending increase have been young but average starters, since they are the players who are absorbing most of the free agent spending in this era.

Either way, one side or the other will be very surprised by what Walker gets this offseason. It’s the only possible reality when opinions are this split on a player.

Here’s a quick update on what the consensus free agent board looks like now that we have 17 rankings to average out for each player. The Packers’ scheduled free agents are bolded.

Top-50 Consensus Free Agent Rankings Update

  • 1: George Pickens, WR
  • 2: Trey Hendrickson, EDGE
  • 3: Tyler Linderbaum, C
  • 4: Jaelan Phillips, EDGE
  • 5: Daniel Jones, QB
  • 6: Alec Pierce, WR
  • 7: Breece Hall, RB
  • 8: Rasheed Walker, T
  • 9: Devin Lloyd, LB
  • 10: Jaylen Watson, CB
  • 11: Mike Evans, WR
  • 12: Kenneth Walker III, RB
  • 13: Kyle Pitts, TE
  • 14: Odafe Oweh, EDGE
  • 15: Malik Willis, QB
  • 16: Jauan Jennings, WR
  • 17: Travis Etienne Jr., RB
  • 18: Tariq Woolen, CB
  • 19: Jamel Dean, CB
  • 20: Bryan Cook, S
  • 21: Khalil Mack, EDGE
  • 22: Connor McGovern, C
  • 23: Braden Smith, T
  • 24: Rashid Shaheed, WR
  • 25: David Edwards, G
  • 26: Romeo Doubs, WR
  • 27: John Franklin-Myers, iDL
  • 28: Aaron Rodgers, QB
  • 29: Wan’Dale Robinson, WR
  • 30: Joey Bosa, EDGE
  • 31: Devin Bush, LB
  • 32: Isaac Seumalo, G
  • 33: Boye Mafe, EDGE
  • 34: Isaiah Likely, TE
  • 35: Coby Bryant, S
  • 36: Javonte Williams, RB
  • 37: Kamren Curl, S
  • 38: Deebo Samuel, WR
  • 39: Nakobe Dean, LB
  • 40: Quay Walker, LB
  • 41: Alijah Vera-Tucker, G
  • 42: Nahshon Wright, CB
  • 43: Joel Bitonio, G
  • 44: Dallas Goedert, TE
  • 45: Jermaine Eluemunor, T
  • 46: Jaquan Brisker, S
  • 47: Kevin Byard, S
  • 48: Travis Kelce, TE
  • 49: K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE
  • 50: Demario Davis, LB

Below are rankings of all of the Packers who made at least one of these lists:

Packers Consensus Free Agent Rankings Update

  • #8: Rasheed Walker, T
  • #15: Malik Willis, QB
  • #26: Romeo Doubs, WR
  • #40: Quay Walker, LB
  • #141: Kingsley Enagbare, ED
  • #209: Sean Rhyan, C
  • #337: John FitzPatrick, TE

For what it’s worth to Green Bay fans, Aaron Rodgers is ranked 28th, Eric Stokes is ranked 74th, Rasul Douglas is 81st and Trevon Diggs is ranked 123rd.

Nick Wright says Luka Doncic, Nikola Jokic have ‘not ascended’ to level of Caitlin Clark’s popularity

Photo by Srdjan Stevanovic/Getty Images
Photo by Srdjan Stevanovic/Getty Images

Nick Wright has claimed that Luka Doncic and Nikola Jokic have not reached the level of popularity currently enjoyed by Caitlin Clark.

The outspoken analyst sparked debate by suggesting the NBA’s next generation of international superstars has yet to capture mainstream recognition on the same scale as some of the sport’s most established names.

Nick Wright names Caitlin Clark as the most famous under 35

Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images
Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images

Nick Wright made the bold assertion while discussing basketball’s global visibility. What’s Wright Show on X shared his comments about the current hierarchy of fame in the sport.

“The single most famous basketball player under the age of 35 years old is Caitlin Clark,” Wright said. “The three most famous basketball players right now are 41-year-old LeBron James and then 37-year-old Steph [Curry] and KD [Kevin Durant].”

Wright’s point centred on star power rather than skill. In his view, Clark’s meteoric rise and crossover appeal have made her the most recognisable name among younger basketball stars.

Nick Wright says Luka Doncic and Nikola Jokic have not ascended

Wright extended that argument by naming several current NBA headliners. He suggested that despite their MVP credentials and playoff success, they have not yet reached the mainstream stature of older legends.

“Anthony Edwards, Luka [Doncic], [Nikola] Jokic, Giannis [Antetokounmpo]. Those guys have not ascended to that level, and that is the major issue facing the league… and they’re hoping Wemby will solve it,” Wright added.

The claim is likely to divide opinion. Doncic and Jokic are widely regarded as two of the most gifted players in the league. However, Wright’s focus was on celebrity appeal and visibility rather than performance metrics.

Whether fair or not, the debate underscores a broader conversation about marketability, media presence, and how the NBA transitions from the LeBron and Curry era to its next defining superstar.

Read more:

MM 2.19: Maryland tennis maintains undefeated season with win over James Madison

Maryland tennis improved to 7-0 Wednesday with its 6-1 win over James Madison. The Terps’ seven straight wins to open their season is the program’s longest streak in over 30 years.

Maryland won both of its duos matchups, with Diya Challa and Aida Eissa claiming one, and Magdalena Baniak and Oliwia Orlinska grinding out the other in a 7-5 comeback.

Ema Kovacevic, Emma Ghirardato and Baniak all secured singles victories to clinch the victory. Lucia Donnelly also captured a comeback win after trailing 4-2 in the second set.

In other news

Maryland men’s basketball fell to Northwestern Wednesday night, 78-74. Matt Germack recapped the contest.

Isi Ozzy-Momodu has been a welcome force for Maryland women’s basketball this season. Ben Messinger detailed the big’s rise and how her personality has infected the team.

Maryland track & field is set for its next meet on Friday.

Next stop: Annapolis 📍

📰: https://t.co/0V6uPm9bbUpic.twitter.com/Opy2EKmDxh

— Maryland Track & Field (@MarylandTrack) February 18, 2026

No. 14 Maryland women’s basketball was named USBWA Team of the Week.

Your @usbwa Team of the Week!#faMily 🐢 pic.twitter.com/Wr42hn0X2c

— Maryland Women’s Basketball (@TerpsWBB) February 18, 2026

Former Maryland baseball star Eddie Hacopian signed with the Quebec Capitales.

Congratulations to @EddieHacopian on signing with @CapitalesQuebec of the Frontier League! #DirtyTerpspic.twitter.com/7CeGKQ2de8

— Maryland Baseball (@TerpsBaseball) February 18, 2026

Maryland gymnastics is set for its bout Friday.

Mark your calendars: 7 p.m., Friday! 🌟

Back home against Nebraska!

Preview | https://t.co/En0I1fNEpopic.twitter.com/pJCLJGFW5D

— Maryland Gymnastics (@TerpsGymnastics) February 18, 2026

Maryland athletics received a gift of $2.5 million.

We are incredibly grateful for Bob & Carol Baker’s newest $2.5M gift — bringing their total support for Maryland Athletics to $10M! 💛🐢 Their generosity will create lasting opportunities for Terps now and in the future.

Read More: https://t.co/pVzSnmJeAdpic.twitter.com/1mk3nE3DXg

— Terrapin Club (@TerrapinClub) February 18, 2026

Ange Postecoglou rules out return to Celtic despite 'amazing experience'

Ange Postecoglou has said he wouldn't consider a return to managing Celtic but has reflected on the "amazing experience" he enjoyed in Glasgow.

The Australian lifted five trophies in two years at the club, and won the affection of fans with his attacking style of play before leaving for Tottenham Hotspur in 2023.

Postecoglou has been out of work since being sacked by Nottingham Forest in October and has been linked with a return to Celtic in the summer as the Premiership champions search for their next permanent manager.

The 60-year-old told The Overlap that it wasn't in his nature to return to a job he had done before.

"I don't go back," he said. "I don't think that's been my career."

However, Postecoglou talked about his time as Celtic manager in positive terms, saying he loved the passion of the fans.

"I loved Celtic," he said. "What a football club.

"If I was younger, I probably would have stayed there longer for three or four years. I think I could have made progress with them in Europe. But at the time, it had taken me a lot of time to get to this space and the opportunity to join Tottenham was too good.

"In terms of going back, I don't go back. I don't think that's been my career.

"Whatever the next step is, I think it will be something new, something I can make an impact in, somewhere I can win things.

"It doesn't diminish the affection I have for Celtic. It was a great experience. For two years, to be within a community that is so passionate, and it's crazy how passionate they are, obviously I was fortunate enough to have success.

"It's a positive experience and I loved every minute of it. I look back on it fondly but… I won't go back. It's not how my career plays out."

He also described the city rivalry with Rangers and shared memories of his first season in charge, when the club won the Premiership and League Cup.

"Nobody is going to talk to me about rivalry," Postecoglou said. "I lived and breathed it there.

"The perfect weekend in Scotland is Celtic winning, Rangers losing. Celtic winning, Rangers winning is not a good weekend.

"I remember the first year I was there we won the double but Rangers were in the Europa League final. I got more text messages the night they lost the Europa League final than the night we won the league.

"People were ecstatic."

An image detailing how to follow your Premier League team on BBC Sport: "On the app? Tap the bell icon to get news about your club sent to you. Signed in on a browser? Hit 'Follow' to stay up to date.
[BBC]

West Texas A&M hires Kevin Bleil as its new offensive coordinator

West Texas A&M football announced the hiring of Kevin Bleil as its new offensive coordinator Wednesday, via a news release. 

Bleil joins the Buffs after two seasons as the offensive coordinator at Pittsburg State. During the 2024 campaign, the Gorillas averaged 357.1 yards of offense per game, with 223 yards coming through the air, and finished 8-3 with an appearance in the NCAA Playoffs. 

Pittsburg State went 10-3 last season, capturing a share of the 2025 MIAA Championship and making its fourth consecutive trip to the NCAA Playoffs. The team averaged 394.6 yards of offense per game and 29.2 points per contest. 

Bleil has broad experience 

Bleil began his collegiate coaching career as a student assistant at Akron, followed by stints as a graduate assistant at Central Missouri (2010-11) and Iowa State (2012). At Iowa State, he worked alongside his father, Bill, who served as the Cyclones’ assistant head coach and offensive line coach. The team earned a berth in the 2012 Liberty Bowl during his time there. 

He spent two seasons as the wide receivers coach at East Texas A&M (2013-14), where the Lions led NCAA Division II in six offensive categories in 2014, including scoring offense (54.4 ppg) and total offense (535.4 ypg). 

West Texas A&M hired Kevin Bleil, who comes to Canyon following two seasons as the Offensive Coordinator at Pittsburg State.

Bleil joined then head coach Josh Lynn’s staff at Nebraska-Kearney in 2015 as the quarterbacks coach and was promoted to co-offensive coordinator and passing game coordinator. Every major offensive statistic for UNK improved from 2015 to 2016, and the team had five offensive players named All-MIAA. 

In 2018, Bleil moved to Stephen F. Austin, where he served as the inside wide receivers coach for five seasons. He helped the Lumberjacks to an 8-4 record and a berth in the NCAA FCS Playoffs in 2021. During his tenure at SFA, Bleil coached three-time All-America and two-time WAC Offensive Player of the Year Xavier Gipson, who now plays for the New York Jets. 

Bleil joining Buff Nation with family 

The Uniontown, Ohio, native played collegiate baseball at the University of Akron, earning a bachelor’s of science degree in civil engineering in May 2010. Bleil and his wife, Stephanie, have three daughters: Braelyn, Adley and Kensie. 

“I’m excited to welcome Kevin, Stephanie, Braelyn, Adley and Kensie to the Texas Panhandle. Coach Bleil builds great relationships with his players that last well beyond their collegiate career. The young men in our locker room are going to love coming to the field everyday” West Texas A&M head coach Josh Lynn said. “Kevin has made a name for himself as one of the top coordinators in the country at any level. We are extremely lucky to have him and his family join BuffNation.” 

This story was created by Jared Greenleaf (jgreenleaf@gannett.com) with the assistance of Artificial Intelligence (AI). Journalists were involved in every step of the information gathering, review, editing, and publishing process. Learn more at cm.usatoday.com/ethical conduct.  

This article originally appeared on Amarillo Globe-News: West Texas A&M football hires new offensive coordinator

New Titans DC Gus Bradley lauds Robert Saleh’s vision at intro presser

Tennessee Titans coach Robert Saleh is a coach that defensive coordinator Gus Bradley can get behind.

The Titans hired Bradley as defensive coordinator on Feb. 4. The 59-year-old followed Saleh from the San Francisco 49ers to Tennessee this offseason. Saleh was the 49ers’ defensive coordinator in 2025, while Bradley served as an assistant head coach/defense.

At Bradley’s introductory press conference on Wednesday, the veteran coordinator extolled Saleh’s leadership when asked how he can be a support to Saleh in the latter’s second head coaching stint in the NFL.

"One thing you'll find out about Robert, he's pretty in tune to his vision,” Bradley said. “He has a pretty good idea, especially now, the experience he's had, what it needs to look like, what we need to do.”

Saleh expressed his intent for the Titans to play “fast and violent,” in 2026 at his own introductory press conference on Jan. 29. The 47-year-old harped on speed when referencing his goal for both the defense as well as the offense.

Bradley went on to laud Saleh for his ability to set the tone on a team.

"He's always been a guy that I look at, and I said, one of the better leaders create the standard and the pace of the organization. And that's what he did in San Francisco, that's wherever he's been, so I anticipate no different here."

Bradley, as well as Saleh share likeminded goals for the Titans in 2026. They’re tasked with establishing a tone within the Titans’ ranks next season.

This article originally appeared on Titans Wire: Tennessee Titans: Gus Bradley lauds Robert Saleh’s vision

Eight Nebraska volleyball players to particiapte in Team USA training

Eight Nebraska volleyball players will participate in the 2026 Women’s National Team Collegiate Training in Colorado Springs. Laney Choboy, Andi Jackson, Olivia Mauch, Harper Murray, Manaia Ogbechie, Bergen Reilly, Teraya Sigler, and Keoni Williams will all participate in training starting on Thursday.

62 athletes from 29 NCAA Division I universities will be led by Women’s National Team head coach Erik Sullivan. The weekend is described as 'a high-level development opportunity, allowing athletes to train and compete in a national team environment while being assessed by Women’s National Team staff.'

In addition to on-court training, the athletes will attend presentations from the two major professional volleyball leagues (Major League Volleyball and League One Volleyball). Team USA training will take place February 19-22 at the U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Training Center in Colorado Springs.

You can find a list of all 2026 participants below.

Ayden Ames, MB, Creighton, Lone StarHenley Anderson, OPP, Texas, Lone StarLizzy Andrew, MB, Stanford, ColumbiaFavor Anyanwu, MB, SMU, Lone StarAvah Armour, OPP, Central Florida, FloridaJaela Auguste, MB, Wisconsin, Lone StarBlaire Bayless, OH, Pitt North TexasLogan Bell, L, Kansas, HoosierIsabella Bullington, OH, Northwestern, Great LakesPaityn Chapman, OPP, Illinois, Rocky MountainChloe Chicoine, OH, Louisville, HoosierLaney Choboy, L, Nebraska, CarolinaAlanah Clemente, OPP, Oregon SCSNSuli Davis, OH, SMU, North TexasGrace Egan, OH, Wisconsin, Great LakesAbbey Emch, MB, Pitt, Ohio ValleySpencer Etzler, L, Stanford, Ohio ValleyAudrey Flanagan, OH, Wisconsin, SCSNCharlie Fuerbringer, S, Wisconsin, SCSNRamsey Gary, L, Texas, HoosierKamryn Gibadlo, OH, Utah, ArizonaCarly Gilk, OPP, Minnesota, North CountryNoemie Glover, OPP, Arizona State, SCSNGenevieve Harris, S, Texas, CarolinaTaylor Harvey, MB, Texas, IntermountainLily Hayes, L, Florida, FloridaAndi Jackson, MB, Nebraska, Rocky MountainRyla Jones, MB, Penn State, ChesapeakeBrielle Kemavor, MB, BYU, ChesapeakeCaroline Kerr, S, Tennessee, Great LakesKari Knotts, OH, N/A, SouthernMorgan Madison, L, Baylor, Lone StarLindsey Mangelson, OH, Mississippi State, HoosierKennedy Martin, OPP, Penn State, CarolinaOlivia Mauch, L, Nebraska, Great PlainsReese Messer, S, USC, GatewayHarper Murray, OH, Nebraska, LakeshoreKassie O’Brien, S, Kentucky, Lone StarManaia Ogbechie, MB, Nebraska, SCSNTaylor Parks, S, Florida, FloridaPayton Petersen, OH, Louisville, IowaBergen Reilly, S, Nebraska, Great PlainsJurnee Robinson, OH, LSU, CarolinaAlec Rothe, MB, Florida, Ohio ValleyElia Rubin, OH, Stanford, SCSNErika Sayer, MB, Stanford, SCSNTeraya Sigler, OH, Nebraska, Great PlainsCari Spears, OPP, Texas, North TexasTorrey Stafford, OH, Texas, SCSNKyndal Stowers, OH, Texas A& M, North TexasStella Swenson, S, Minnesota, North CountryJordan Taylor, MB, Minnesota, Lone StarHalle Thompson, OH, Wisconsin, Lone StarMia Tvrdy, MB, USC, Great PlainsRachel Van Gorp, L, Iowa State GatewayAbby Vander Wal, OH, Texas, Great LakesAlice Volpe, L, TCU, Lone StarNatalie Wardlow, MB, Wisconsin, Great PlainsAyanna Watson, OH, Pitt, SCSNLondon Wijay, OH, USC, SCSNKeoni Williams, MB, Nebraska, North TexasPrinzez Zeck, MB, American, Chesapeake

Contact/Follow us @CornhuskersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Nebraska news, notes and opinions.

This article originally appeared on Cornhuskers Wire: Eight Nebraska volleyball players to particiapte in Team USA training

Vote for the Pensacola area boys lacrosse preseason player of the year

On Feb. 17, the PNJ released a list of 20 high school boys lacrosse players to watch for the 2026 season.

You’ll notice we didn’t rank them. Today, we’re cutting down that list to nine nominees for the preseason player of the year.

That’s where readers come in. Vote for your top choice until 11 a.m. on Feb. 26. Please note that this has no impact on end of season all area awards.

Here are the nominees listed in alphabetical order.

Hjulmand indicates rotation amid hectic Leverkusen schedule

Hjulmand indicates rotation amid hectic Leverkusen schedule
Hjulmand indicates rotation amid hectic Leverkusen schedule

After a 4-0 win over FC St. Pauli, Bayer Leverkusen coach Kasper Hjulmand fielded the exact same starting XI for Wednesday’s 2-0 Champions League victory over Olympiacos.

Speaking after the game in Greece, the Danish coach explained at the post-match press conference that the three-day gap between the two matches “offered the possibility to have a bit of continuity from the start.”

However, with three more games scheduled over the next 10 days, rotation will be necessary. 

"It can’t go on like this, that’s not possible," Hjulmand stressed, indicating changes ahead of Saturday's Bundesliga clash with 1. FC Union Berlin.

“We have a good bench with quality players. We have a large squad and high quality, so it’s possible for us to rotate,” he added.

How NBA star Michael Jordan saved NASCAR | Column

Michael Jordan, 23XI Racing co-owner, speaks with NASCAR chairman Jim France after Jordan's team won the Daytona 500 on Feb. 15 in Daytona Beach. (AP Photo/Nigel Cook) DBR166 ©Nigel Cook
Michael Jordan, 23XI Racing co-owner, speaks with NASCAR chairman Jim France after Jordan's team won the Daytona 500 on Feb. 15 in Daytona Beach. (AP Photo/Nigel Cook) DBR166 ©Nigel Cook

Did it take a Black man to carve a future for NASCAR?

I wondered at the irony last week after watching NBA legend Michael Jordan celebrate in Victory Lane after his team won NASCAR’s-season opening Daytona 500. It was a startling moment only weeks after NASCAR settled Jordan’s federal antitrust lawsuit against the racing behemoth, in what seemed like a storybook payback on the biggest day of the NASCAR calendar.

I’m not sure how many people tuning in were looking for an ah-ha moment. Having attended my share of races there, I think the average Daytona fan is looking out for speed, wrecks, driver’s merch and rain clouds that too often ruin the weekend.

But Jordan’s victory last Sunday was a fitting bookend to the legal victory he achieved in December. For years, multimillionaire white team owners groused that NASCAR’s business model shortchanged them of their fair share, insisting they needed a new revenue-sharing agreement to keep their costly franchises afloat. But it was Jordan’s suit that forced a historic change, one that could ultimately stabilize a sport that’s long been associated with white Southern heritage.

Two racing teams, including one Jordan co-owns, sued NASCAR in October 2024, alleging that the organization — which has been privately owned by the France family since its inception in 1948 — had acted as “monopolistic bullies” by unfairly binding teams through a charter system that limited competition.

Charters are essentially a franchise model that NASCAR uses to award teams a spot and a share of revenue in a race. Team owners had argued for years that the charters should be made permanent, but in 2024, faced with an ultimatum from NASCAR, most team owners caved. But two teams — Jordan’s 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports — refused to go along and sued. After days of embarrassing testimony, NASCAR relented and agreed to grant race teams the permanent charters they wanted.

That a Black team owner was the public face of such a monumental change to the top flight of American motorsports cannot be overlooked. It was not the white titans who long dominated pit row, but Jordan who put his bacon on the line, and by so doing, positioned the sport to flourish and grow.

His catapult to the upper ranks of influence within NASCAR marks history itself for a pastime so deeply ingrainedin Southern culture. Confederate flags have long adorned NASCAR tracks, and many races in the 1960s and 70s — the Dixie 250, the Mason-Dixon 500 — reflected NASCAR’s southern roots. For a time, the Rebel 400 at Darlington Speedway in South Carolina coincided with Confederate Memorial Day, a holiday thatthestate still recognizes today.

The sport has changed over the years, as has the crowd and the sanctioning body. NASCAR adopted more night races, pursued new sponsors and policed a conduct code to broaden its demographic appeal. It created a diversity program to draw more minorities and women into the sport. In 2020, it banned Confederate flags from its events in the wake of the national uproar over the killing of George Floyd. Darlington Speedway took its own steps, too, offering fans American flags in 2015 in exchange for their Confederate ones.

I’ve seen these changes firsthand over the last 20 years, though you don’t recreate the vibe of a racing weekend overnight. And the experiences at tracks like Daytona and Atlanta are still different from those at places like Homestead-Miami and Las Vegas.

But the outcome of Jordan’s lawsuit will keep moving NASCAR in the right direction. A bigger cut for owners will give those businesses more security, help build stronger relationships between crews and drivers and enable teams to become more engaged and relevant with their fans. It will help drivers and sponsors better navigate the evolving media market, strengthening fan and brand loyalty. It brings business and legal certainty to NASCAR, a majorFlorida-based operation. And it provides NASCAR with new incentives to further diversify its fan base, which will only help the sport and industry grow. Next week’s Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg, for example, will host the first-ever street race in the NASCAR truck series.

NASCAR may have settled, but everybody won. You can thank NBA champion Michael Jordan.

Slot on Isak's recovery, Szoboszlai's position and facing Pereira's Forest

Liverpool boss Arne Slot has been speaking to the media before Sunday's Premier League game against Nottingham Forest at the City Ground (14:00 GMT).

Here are the key lines from his news conference:

  • Slot confirmed Joe Gomez is available and fit to start. Jeremie Frimpong "will not be involved this weekend" but Slot said "we hope he will be involved next week if things go as planned".
  • Wataru Endo will be out "for a long time" with the injury he sustained against Sunderland but there is not yet a timescale, while Alexander Isak "has been on the pitch not with his football shoes but with his running shoes for the first time this week so it will still be a while".
  • More on Isak, who continues to recover from a broken leg: "You do know you're in your final stages of rehab. Next step is, of course, doing work with the ball and then going into the group, but it takes a while before you're ready to play. It's nice that rehab has gone well- compliments to him and our medical staff. Let's not put a timescale on it but it's clear he will be available if things go as planned this season."
  • Asked whether the Reds needed free midweek, Slot said: "Not needed it, no. Maybe if you ask me again in a month it's different. It was nice to have days off, but I didn't really need it. Last season, I maybe needed it more. I'm enjoying the work I do over here - I enjoy working with the players and the staff."
  • On Dominik Szoboszlai's position: "He played a good game in midfield [against Brighton in the FA Cup]. The week before he played a very good game at right-back, and the week before a good game in another position. A player with his quality can play in multiple positions and I have to find the best position for him and for the team."
  • On facing Vitor Pereira's Forest after losing at 3-0 at home earlier in the season when they were manager by Sean Dyche: "Back then, it was Dyche's third or fourth game. That makes it a little bit more difficult. We only have tonight [Forest's Europa League match at Fenerbahce] to see if this new manager changes personnel. The good thing is they have that game, and the manager was in the Premier League last season."
  • On a recent return to goalscoring form: "We always try to press, bring the ball out from the back, and we want to entertain. We don't always achieve that. Sometimes it's about us and sometimes it's the teams facing us don't want an entertaining game. For a lot of the season, when we've lost or drawn, we have not deserved it. Things went a bit more back to normal recently and you can see that in performances and results."

Follow all of Thursday's Premier League news conferences and the rest of the day's football news

Listen to live commentary of Nottingham Forest v Liverpool on Sunday from 14:00 on BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds

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Why South Carolina's Dawn Staley said SEC Tournament isn't all bad

COLUMBIA — Conference tournaments mean a lot to some programs and for others, not so much.

South Carolina women's basketball is going for its 10th SEC Tournament championship under coach Dawn Staley.

Staley was asked in light of Ole Miss coach Yolett McPhee-McCuin's recent comments if there's a way to preserve the importance of conference tournaments while also not penalizing teams for losing in a tough league.

"Well one, we don't know if we're going to be penalized yet for the SEC Tournament and two, your resume can upgrade from the tournament as well," Staley said. "If you look at it a lot of different ways, I'm hoping it doesn't hurt any of us. I think our body of work as a conference speaks for itself and at the end of the day we hope that all of the teams and what we've been through in our conference will get the seed we deserve."

The No. 3 Gamecocks (25-2, 11-1 SEC) are two games ahead of everyone else heading into their final four games, starting with No. 24 Alabama (20-6, 6-6) on Feb. 19 (8:30 p.m. ET, SEC Network). South Carolina is hoping to clinch its 10th regular-season championship.

What Coach Yo, Kim Mulkey said about SEC Tournament

Ole Miss coach Yolett McPhee-McCuin said Feb. 15 that she wishes "we didn't have the conference tournament because all we do in the SEC is beat each other up," adding that "sometimes we can get penalized" for losing games in a really tough league.

"And if you look at the history of our league, we always have anywhere from four to five to six teams in the Sweet 16 because this is a really good league. But when we're in here fighting night in and night out, it's tough, and you can lose at any point."

LSU's Kim Mulkey has also mentioned her distaste for conference tournaments.

"I’ve won a bunch of conference tournaments," Mulkey said last March. "Everybody likes to win, get a trophy but at the end of the day I've also been in those tournaments where I've had injuries and those kids couldn't go on and play in the most important tournament the NCAA Tournament ... I’ve never been a fan of conference tournaments."

SEC dominates women's college basketball rankings

In the polls released Feb. 17, 10 of 16 SEC teams are ranked and four are in the top 10. In the latest bracketology from ESPN, 11 SEC teams are projected to make the tournament.

The NCAA Tournament committee's first in-season reveal of the top 16 seeds dropped on Feb. 14 and of the top 16, six were from the SEC.

One of many things the committee uses to evaluate teams is NET ranking, which is "a predictive tool based on whom you played, where you played, how efficiently you played and the result of the game."

UConn is No. 1 in NET rankings as of Feb. 17, with UCLA second and South Carolina third. UCLA has the most Quad 1 wins with 14. UConn and South Carolina have seven.

Lulu Kesin covers South Carolina athletics for The Greenville News and the USA TODAY Network. Email her at LKesin@usatodayco.com. Follow her on X@Lulukesin and Bluesky‪@bylulukesin.bsky.social‬

This article originally appeared on Greenville News: How Dawn Staley reacted to coaches criticizing SEC Tournament

USA vs Canada women's hockey, Part 2: Is this best USA team ever?

MILAN — Is this the best U.S. women's national hockey team we've ever seen?

"Absolutely," Olympic champion Monique Lamoureux told USA TODAY Sports on Tuesday.

Many talented squads have worn USA across their chests. There's the 1998 team that clinched Olympic gold in the inaugural women’s competition in Nagano. The 2018 team topped the podium following a dramatic shootout in Pyeongchang, made possible by Lamoureux’s game-tying goal and her twin Jocelyne’s shootout winner.

But the 2026 U.S. women’s team could be the most complete squad we've seen on the Winter Olympics stage. The U.S. women have been unstoppable in their run to Thursday’s gold medal game against Canada. Depth is their superpower and they are firing on all cylinders, with nearly every player on the roster on the score sheet.

"Everyone up and down the lineup is contributing,” said Lamoureux. "Sometimes you get a line that's really hot at an Olympics or in a tournament and you really lean on that line, but to see them all performing at the same tournament… that's really good to see.”

Winter Olympics updates: Mikaela Shiffrin comes through for slalom gold

That’s not an exaggeration by any means. Team USA has outscored opponents, 31-1, through six games with 19 players registering at least one point. Fifteen players have found the back of the net. And offense isn't the only thing rolling. USA’s three goalies have combined for five consecutive shutouts.

“Anytime I put on the jersey I just feel so lucky to be part of this group,” starting goalie Aerin Frankel said. "There's so much talent in our locker room. It’s just so much fun to play with the best players in the world.”

What makes the U.S women’s hockey team the best we’ve ever seen? USA TODAY Sports asked three-time Olympic medalist Monique Lamoureux ahead of Thursday’s gold medal match.

Monique Lamoureux weighs in on Team USA

The U.S. women's national team has numerous offensive threats, which will force Canada to pick your poison. Lamoureux said the reigning Olympic champions will likely look to shut down defender Caroline Harvey, who leads the "most offensively skilled defensive core from top to bottom that we've ever seen."

Harvey is one of 11 players returning from the 2022 Beijing Games, where the U.S. settled for silver following a devastating 3-2 loss to Canada, the nation’s fourth runner-up finish to the Canadians at the Olympics. That's a defeat that likely remains in the back of their heads. It’s not a loss that’s easy to get over, but it has served as fuel for their dominant run in Milan. 

"When you lose at the Olympics, it's unlike anything else when you have to watch the other team celebrate for 30 to 40 minutes before they bring the medals out,” Lamoureux told USA TODAY Sports. "That's something that sticks with you. So I'm sure they've used it as motivation.”

Team USA defender Caroline Harvey handles the puck against Canada in group A play during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games.

Harvey walked away from Beijing with the most motivation. She made her Olympic debut at age 19 as the youngest member of Team USA in 2022, but her lack of ice time (only about a minute in total) deeply rattled her confidence. Harvey has responded in historic fashion and is now one of the best players on ice.

The 23-year-old senior at the University of Wisconsin leads all women at the Olympics with nine points — seven assists and two goals — marking a record for an American defender at the Olympics.

"Really you can take that one of two ways... but to come back four years later and be one of the top, or if not the top player on the U.S. for this tournament, speaks to her character and just the people she surrounded herself with to put her in a position that she's in now," Lamoureux said.

Harvey leads a young core of stars that represent both the present and future of the national team. While the veterans like five-time Olympian Hilary Knight and four-time Olympian Kendall Coyne Schofield  have anchored the team, the twelve players making Olympic debuts have infused youth into the lineup.

Seven players are still in college, but you wouldn't be able to tell by their sheer production. The young stars are unphased by the moment and have successfully "made that jump from college or the pros to the international level," Lamoureux said, which isn't easy despite how the U.S. rookies make it look.

"Everyone tells you when you're preparing (for the Olympics), prepare like any other tournament... Well, I feel like most people that tell you that have not been to the Olympics," added Lamoureux. "The pressure when you're only there once every four years and the amount of eyes that are on you, it's unlike anything else... It seems like they're handling it very well and they're managing everything very well."

Lamoureux will have her eyes out for the second line of Hannah Bilka, Taylor Heise and Abbey Murphy on Thursday. Bilka was on the starting line for the first three games of the tournament, before moving to the second line ahead of USA's 5-0 shutout of Canada Feb. 10. The move paid off as Bilka scored two of her four goals in the Canadian rout.

"They're just a bunch of spark plugs out there. They move fast, they're creative, they play really hard and with an edge," Lamoureux said of the second line. "I know everyone's talking about Abbey Murphy and how she plays with a chip on her shoulder and she gets under the other team's skin. So I'd like to think that's how my sister and I played when we were on the ice. So I love watching her play."

Team USA's three goalkeepers are also first-time Olympians, but have been solid in front of the net. Team USA conceded only one goal in its Olympic opener against Czechia, but has since kept opponents off the score sheet for the last 331:23 minutes of play. Frankel has recorded three of Team USA's five shutouts, becoming the first goaltender in do so in women’s Olympic hockey.

Lamoureux praised Frankel's skill ability to stay focused and engaged in front of the net.

"She's small for a goalie. So her athleticism and her ability to read plays, I think it is just at an elite level," Lamoureux said, pointing to her performance against Sweden on Monday. "(Frankel) had two shots in the first period and then in the second period she gets 13 shots. Those are not easy games to play in...Her and the other goalies have been ready at every step of the way."

What to expect in USA vs. Canada gold medal match?

The USA-Canada women's ice hockey rivalry is like no other in sports. Although the players taking the ice in Thursday's gold-medal match have played together in the PWHL, Lamoureux said there will still be fireworks. The Americans shut out the Canada for the first time in Olympic history Feb. 10, further adding fuel to the flame, but the Canadians will have five-time Olympian Marie-Philip Poulin back in the lineup after injury.

"When you're putting on your country's jersey and you're going against Canada, there's certainly no love lost," added Lamoureux, who expects a physical and heated matchup. "As far as offensive threats, the US definitely has a lot more of 'em for sure...We're going to see some awesome hockey on Thursday."

Team USA is one win away from securing its first gold medal since 2018, which would cap Hilary Knight's prolific Olympic career with her fifth medal and second gold. Knight is one point and one goal away from setting all-time U.S. Olympic records. She's also one medal away from the U.S. Olympic record.

"It would be pretty amazing to see her top it off with one more gold medal," Lamoureux said. "Some people were kind of counting her out and saying she was past her prime... to see her continue to produce at an elite level and just to be able to sustain a career like that for so long is, I mean, there's not that many people who've done it."

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: USA vs Canada women's hockey, for gold: Is this best USA team ever?

How Shane Beamer changed South Carolina football roster at almost every position in portal

COLUMBIA — South Carolina football coach Shane Beamer heavily utilized the transfer portal to rebuild his roster for 2026.

South Carolina added 25 players via the portal, and the class ranks No. 22 nationally and No. 10 in the SEC, according to 247Sports.

The Gamecocks went 4-8 in 2025, the worst in Beamer's five seasons after going 9-3 (the best) in 2024.

Beamer returned his star trio of quarterback LaNorris Sellers, wide receiver Nyck Harbor and edge rusher Dylan Stewart.

Here's a look at how the transfer portal changed almost every position for South Carolina.

Is Christian Clark the next star South Carolina running back?

There was a dip in run game success in 2025. Rahsul Faison was South Carolina's leader with 470 yards and three touchdowns, and Oscar Adaway added 140 yards and one touchdown, but both are out of eligibility.

Christian Clark played in eight games for Texas in 2025, finishing with 236 yards on 55 carries and two touchdowns, averaging 4.3 yards per carry.

Clark brings SEC experience, and South Carolina only returns three running backs who combined had 341 rushing yards in 2025, so Clark might jump up to RB1.

Shane Beamer brings in portal kicker for first time

Texas Tech's Upton Bellenfant was 6-of-6 on field goals with his longest a 33-yarder in 2025. He played behind Stone Harrington but was the main kicker in 2024 for Buffalo.

Beamer also brought in long snapper Emmet Rhoades to add to his group of transfer specialists.

South Carolina has completely new offensive line

South Carolina lost eight offensive linemen from the 2025 roster and brought in eight new players for the 2026 team.

Josiah Thompson entered the transfer portal but returned 11 days later and will likely start at left tackle for the third straight season.

Jacarrius Peak from NC State has played 2,202 total snaps in his career with only seven sacks allowed, per Pro Football Focus. He allowed just three on 850 snaps in 2025, earning a 73.8 grade for his offense by PFF.

Sellers needs better protection in 2026 so this is a critical position group for the offseason.

South Carolina brings in edges to help Dylan Stewart

Stewart is a 6-foot-5 game-changer on defense and he had 4.5 sacks and three forced fumbles last year.

South Carolina brought in Caleb Herring from Tennessee and Drew Collins from Arkansas State to help out Stewart.

In 2025 Bryan Thomas Jr led the way with seven sacks but he's out of eligibility. Desmond Umeozulu played behind Stewart and Thomas, logging a sack but he transferred to Alabama.

South Carolina loses backup QB, adds one

Air Noland transferred to Memphis after one season as Sellers' backup, and the Gamecocks brought in Lucian Anderson III from Bowling Green. Anderson threw for 245 yards and two touchdowns last year.

Cutter Woods showed promise as a freshman, so Woods could be No. 2 behind Sellers or freshman Landon Duckworth might be as well.

Shane Beamer trusts linebacker depth, doesn't add in portal

One position the Gamecocks didn't add to using the portal was at linebacker.

Fred "JayR" Johnson, Shawn Murphy and Justin Okoronkwo were key pieces to the defense last year who are returning.

South Carolina adds four wide receivers in portal

South Carolina added four receivers: Jayden Gibson from Oklahoma, NiTareon "Nitro" Tuggle from Purdue, DJ Black from UCF and Charly Mullaly from Holy Cross.

Gibson was injured for the last two seasons but had 375 yards and five touchdowns for the Sooners in 2023.

Tuggle had 500 receiving yards on 34 receptions to go with four touchdowns in 2025. Mullaly had 17 catches for 189 yards in 2025. Black had 273 receiving yards on 22 catches and two touchdowns.

It'll be interesting to see who rotates in with Harbor, Mazeo Bennett, Jayden Sellers and Donovan Murph.

South Carolina added tight end Max Drag from UCF. He had 19 yards on three catches as a sophomore.

DL Tomiwa Durojaiye could be a game-changer for South Carolina

Tomiwa Durojaiye has spent three seasons at three schools but was a four-star portal defensive lineman out of Illinois in 2025 when he had two sacks.

Losing Nick Barrett and Monkell Goodwine, who were out of eligibility, frees up starting spots.

Quay'Sheed Scott adds to South Carolina secondary

Cornerback Quay'Sheed Scott had 26 solo tackles and one interception in 2025. Beamer lost Jalon Kilgore and Brandon Cisse to the NFL draft and DQ Smith is out of eligibility but still returns Peyton Williams, Vicari Swain and Judge Collier.

Lulu Kesin covers South Carolina athletics for The Greenville News and the USA TODAY Network. Email her at LKesin@usatodayco.com. Follow her on X@Lulukesin and Bluesky‪@bylulukesin.bsky.social‬

This article originally appeared on Greenville News: Shane Beamer transforms South Carolina football 2026 roster in portal

WI vs ITA: West Indies not taking Italy lightly

KOLKATA: The West Indies are in a happy space at this moment. Not often do they show the kind of consistency that they are enjoying in the ongoing T20 World Cup. Three comfortable wins, including one against England, means they are already being counted among the contenders.

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The last group stage match against Italy is up next here on Thursday and batting coach Floyd Reifer says there won’t be any letup.



“We take every game seriously,” Reifer said on Wednesday ahead of a round of practice. “It’s another opportunity for us to keep ticking our boxes. To make sure that we are controlling the different phases in the games that we speak about in the team meetings. Tomorrow’s game will be like that in terms of getting the opportunities to get accustomed.”

Their leading batters have been in good form and that will help their confidence ahead of the Super 8s. Shai Hope, Shimron Hetmyer, Sherfane Rutherford have all been among runs. Brendon King and Rovman Powell too have got starts.

Despite tough finish, Chris Gotterup still atop PGA Tour FedEx Cup list

Chris Gotterup has been the PGA Tour’s most consistent player through the first five weeks of the season, based on the weekly FedEx Cup points race. 

Despite a tie for 37th at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am last week that represented his lowest finish in four starts, Gotterup remains on top of the points list entering the Genesis Invitational, which begins on Feb. 19 at the Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, Calif. 

Gotterup’s lead over second-place Scottie Scheffler shrank, however. Scheffler tied for fourth at Pebble Beach with a final-round 63 and trails Gotterup by 128 points. The margin was 421 points last week. 

Gotterup opened with a 64 in the first round at Pebble Beach but didn't go lower than a third-round 70 the rest of the week.

Collin Morikawa, the winner at Pebble Beach, moved to third on the points list and Hideki Matsuyama, who tied for 8th, is fourth. Ryan Gerard, who tied for 45th, dropped from third to fifth. 

Most FedEx Cup leaders are at Riviera 

With another Signature Event this week, the top players in golf are showing up at Riviera. 

Only No. 24 Michael Thorbjornsen isn’t in the field among the top 30 on the FedEx Cup points list. He’s the fourth alternate and needs a few bad backs to crop up to tee it up. 

Scottie Scheffler made a big move in the final round of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am and remained second on the PGA Tour FedEx Cup points list.

Also playing are defending Players Championship and Masters winner Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele and Jordan Spieth. 

Is tournament host Tiger Woods playing? 

Tiger Woods, who is the tournament host, doesn’t think he’s ready to come back from the two surgeries he had last year and will not be playing at Riviera. 

PGA Tour FedEx Cup leaders 

Through AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am 

  • 1. Chris Gotterup 1066 
  • 2. Scottie Scheffler 938 
  • 3. Collin Morikawa 706 
  • 4. Hideki Matsuyama 560 
  • 5. Ryan Gerard 559 
  • 6. Justin Rose 520 
  • 7. Si Woo Kim 512 
  • 8. Ryo Hisatsune 435 
  • 9. Sepp Straka 419 
  • 10. Min Woo Lee 417 
  • 11. Jake Knapp 405 
  • 12. Pierceson Coody 390 
  • 13. Akshay Bhatia 375 
  • 14. Jacob Bridgeman 369 
  • 15. Tommy Fleetwood 313 
  • 16. Sam Burns 275 
  • 17. Patrick Rodgers 246 
  • 18. Matt McCarty 242 
  • 19. Jason Day 240 
  • 20. Sahith Theegala 233 
  • 21. Maverick McNealy 196 
  • 22. Andrew Putnam 184 
  • 23. Tom Hoge 174.85 
  • 24. Michael Thorbjornsen 174.5 
  • 25. Russell Henley 170 
  • 26. Matt Fitzpatrick 169 
  • 27. Sam Stevens 168 
  • 28. Nicolai Højgaard 162 
  • 29. Harry Hall 162 
  • 30. Robert MacIntyre 158 

Chris Gotterup hits onto the 18th green of the Pebble Beach Golf Links on Feb. 12 during the first round of the  AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

Biggest FedEx Cup movers at Pebble Beach 

  • Collin Morikawa, won at Pebble Beach, up 126 spots (tied for 129th to 3rd) 
  • Sam Burns, tied for 6th at Pebble Beach, up 78 spots (94th to 16th
  • Min Woo Lee, tied for 2nd at Pebble Beach, up 65 spots (75th to 10th
  • Sepp Straka, tied for 2nd at Pebble Beach, up 62 spots (tied for 71st to 9th
  • Brian Harman, tied for 19th at Pebble Beach, up 59 spots (tied for 136th to 77th

This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: Chris Gotterup maintains his lead on the PGA Tour's FedEx Cup points race

Today in Boston Celtics history: Isaiah Thomas, Atkins, Hunter trades

Today in Boston Celtics history, the storied ball club dealt Tayshaun Prince to the Detroit Pistons in 2015 for Jonas Jerebko and GiGi Datome. As part of the exchange, the Celtics also sent Marcus Thornton to the Phoenix Suns. In turn, the Suns sent a guard fighting for floor time in the Suns' overcrowded guard rotation to the Celtics for Thornton.

That point guard we are talking about is none other than the oneday King in the Fourth, Isaiah Thomas, who was, at that time, nonplussed with having to compete for minutes with his Phoenix guard peers Goran Dragic and Eric Bledsoe to get on the basketball court with the Suns.

IT pushed his way into a starting role quickly with his new team, eventually becoming a part of Celtics lore himself with multiple deep playoff runs with the franchise.

Dec 30, 2016; Boston, MA, USA; Boston Celtics guard Isaiah Thomas (4) smiles during the second half against the Miami Heat at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Winslow Townson-USA TODAY Sports

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It is also the anniversary of Boston sending Chris Mills to the Atlanta Hawks, and Mike James to the Pistons for Chucky Atkins, Lindsey Hunter, and the draft pick used to select Tony Allen in 2004. The three-team deal also sent future Celtic Rasheed Wallace to Detroit, completing the roster that won that year's NBA championship.

Neither Hunter, who would be waived by the team inside a week, nor Atkins, who played 24 games during the remainder of that season, would be a major part of the club's future. Atkins was part of the trade that provided the draft pick that became Rajon Rondo a few seasons later.

This article originally appeared on Celtics Wire: Celtics history: Isaiah Thomas, Atkins, Hunter trades

Indiana teacher goes 'kinda viral' on TikTok using NFL, sports-themed lessons

VALPARAISO -- The video on TikTok that went "kinda viral" was recorded on Crystal Lembke's cell phone placed atop an amateur tripod inside her fifth-grade classroom, which is situated in the land of the Chicago Bears, but located in the state the Indianapolis Colts call home.

The NFL is a big topic at Washington Township Elementary School, especially in Lembke's class. She is an official NFeLementary teacher, a curriculum created by Florida teacher Mary Crippen which uses all the layers of an NFL franchise to craft grade school lessons.

Inside Lembke's classroom, sports themes take over blackboards and posters. They are tucked inside NFL binders and displayed on shelves and walls with autographed memorabilia. She uses football, volleyball and any other sport that comes up to teach the state academic standards required for fifth grade.

Math, geography, time zones, writing, statistics, history. But, it goes beyond academics. Teaching with an NFL team at the core of the lessons can get emotional. It's a roller coaster ride of wins and losses, victories and defeats -- off the field, too.

The video on TikTok that went viral for Lembke -- 734,000 views, which for a fifth grade teacher in a modest Midwestern city is pretty viral -- was an emotional one.

Lembke is standing in front of her class, holding back tears the day after Colts wide receiver AD Mitchell was traded to the New York Jets -- with two first-round picks in exchange for cornerback Sauce Gardner. As Lembke looked at her students, she saw four of them crying.

"You're gonna make me cry," she says, as the screen behind her shows Mitchell, "just because we got so emotionally attached to him, and that's OK."

Mitchell had Zoomed with Lembke's class earlier in the season after seeing her NFeLementary videos. The kids asked him questions about his hype up song, who inspired him, what his most memorable moment on the field was.

He sent Lembke's class a signed jersey that read: "One mistake does not define you." That came after his fumble while celebrating a would-be touchdown in the Colts' 27-20 loss to the Rams.

The students fell in love with Mitchell, and they even coined the term "Mitchell Mindset," which means that when you fail, use it as a lesson to grow and get better. Then, he was traded.

"And now he's on another team. That's what hurt them. They were like, 'No, he's ours. He's a Colt,'" Lembke said. "And that's when we had a life lesson."

"In the NFL world, you don't get to choose where you play," Lembke told her class in the video. "You can grow up your whole life being a Chicago Bears fan and then you're on the Packers. You work for the Packers. The NFL is a business."

And that is why Mitchell was traded. "It was so sad that we made a connection with him," Lembke said, "and now he's gone."

Crystal Lembke, a fifth grade teacher at Washington Elementary School in Valparaiso, films Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026, as she and her class figure out averages during a lesson using sports. Lembke has gained thousands of followers on social media showing how the class uses sports as a teaching tool.

The Jets saw Lembke's video after the trade and reposted it, then Mitchell replied to the Jets' post with a personal message for Lembke's class, telling them he may be a Jet now, "but we're always family."

What happened with Mitchell was an unexpected bonus lesson for Lembke's students, a wonderful life lesson, and it is exactly why she took a chance this year to be one of the the first to teach the trailblazing NFeLementary curriculum.

"The students absolutely love it," Lembke said. "I will use this forever."

'Well, it blew up'

Lembke is one of 350 teachers using the NFeLementary curriculum in its first year of being available for purchase. She had been following its creator, Crippen, and loved the concept of using sports to find ways to connect kids to learning.

Teaching the curriculum came naturally to Lembke, who grew up playing sports and going to Colts games with her dad, who was a season ticket holder during the Peyton Manning era at the RCA Dome.

But that very first week, when she saw how engaged and alive her students were, even Lembke was amazed by their response.

"And I didn't record it just because I never recorded myself," Lembke said. "And then the next week, I'm like, 'Well, why don't I just try it? The kids love it. Let's just post it.'"

The first video took Lembke two hours to create. As she gave herself a lesson in TikTok editing, she had no idea what to expect.

After the first video, Lembke's modest following on TikTok grew by 3,000 and today she has more than 17,000 followers. The Mitchell video has 734,000 views, 65,000 likes and 604 comments.

"Well, it blew up. It went kinda viral," Lembke said. "I was like, 'OK, people want to see this.' So, I just kept filming it."

When the Colts' Jonathan Taylor, one of the players Lembke's class had been tracking, had a breakout 244-yard rushing game in an overtime win against the Falcons in November, people Lembke didn't even know reached out. "J.T. had such a good game. I can't wait to see your TikTok."

The class threw a little JT party with balloons and kazoos celebrating his performance, and Lembke posted it to social media, then the students started asking over and over again, "Is he watching? Is he seeing it?"

Lembke used those questions as another teaching moment. "If he is, that's great. And if not, that's OK, too, because that's not the point, right?" Lembke told the students. "The point is we're having fun together, tracking, learning. If he sees it, that's awesome."

And then the message came from Taylor. He had a gift he wanted to send to Lembke and her class. When it arrived, the box was huge and heavy. Inside, Lembke found a game-worn Taylor-autographed cleat for every student.

Needless to say, the kids in Lembke's class were pretty bummed when the NFL season came to an end.

'They didn't want it to end'

Their school days spent tracking rushing and passing yards, knowing the capitals of the states their NFL teams were playing in, calculating the time zone for those international games, dividing, multiplying and coming up with season averages was over, and Lembke's students were sad.

That kind of learning was different and it struck a chord with Abbi Wegrzyn, a fifth-grader in Lembke's class.

"She makes it really fun, because we still learn, even though, like, it doesn't really matter about the game," Abbi said. "We still learn about math and statistics."

As the NFL season neared its end, Lembke came up with an idea to carry on the excitement NFeLementary had brought to her students.

"They're like, 'It's ending. We don't want it to end,'" Lembke said. "And so volleyball was just about to start."

Lembke, a former high school volleyball coach and player who loves the empowerment of women sports, crafted her own curriculum around the Indy Ignite of Major League Volleyball, patterned off the NFeLementary lessons she had been teaching.

Crystal Lembke, a fifth grade teacher at Washington Elementary School in Valparaiso, teaches a lesson Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026, on averages using sports. Following the NFeLementary curriculum, which uses the NFL as a teaching tool, Lembke is shifting and using the Indy Ignite pro volleyball team. Created by Mary Crippen, a third grade educator based in Florida, the NFeLementary curriculum turns football into lesson plans.

Since the Ignite's season opener last month, Lembke's class has been tracking the team, recording kills, digs and assists and calculating what average the team needs each game in each category to reach the mark they set as a goal.

Each game, Lembke features a player spotlight. Last week, it was Leketor Member-Meneh, a star outside hitter who recorded nine kills and ten digs in the team's loss to the San Diego Mojo.

That loss gave Lembke a chance to teach perseverance, which she presented to her students with a quote: "Losses don't end the story. They fuel growth."

"Remember Day 1 of school what I told you? I want you to fail," Lembke told her class. "Because, if you're not failing, you're not trying, you're not learning, you're not growing."

That Ignite loss was a rare one. The team is ranked No. 1 in MLV with an 8-2 record as of Feb. 16. Watching the Ignite's success this season and learning through sports has inspired Elliott Jorczak, a student in Lembke's class.

Elliott told the story of a recent basketball game where he needed to hit a last-minute 3-pointer to win the game for his team. He took the shot, and he air balled it.

"Then the next game, I had a growth mindset," Elliott said, "and I had a really good game and we won."

For Akintunde Adesemowo, he learned a life lesson from Mitchell during his Zoom call with the class when he asked Mitchell what his most memorable game was.

"He said that he doesn't know yet, because he hasn't played that many games," Akintunde said. "And then he said, 'Hopefully one day I can answer the question.'"

There is always time to learn more and accomplish more. That has been one of Lembke's favorite things about her TikTok-meets-classroom journey.

"The coolest part is having adults on TikTok say, 'I didn't know how to do that. I wish I had you as a teacher, because now I know fractions, now I know how to find an average," Lembke said.

"It's brought a lot of joy to me in the classroom. I mean, there's so many negative things around education nowadays. It's brought ... a spark back into the classroom."

Follow IndyStar sports reporter Dana Benbow on X: @DanaBenbow. Reach her via email: dbenbow@indystar.com.   

This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Indiana teacher on TikTok uses NFL, sports-infused lessons, goes viral

Seven Buckeyes will be competing for women’s hockey Olympic gold on Thursday

Women's Ice Hockey: 2026 Winter Olympics: Joy Dunne (24) of the United States shoots during the Women's Playoffs Semifinal match vs Sweden at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena.Milan, Italy 2/16/2026 CREDIT: Erick W. Rasco (Photo by Erick W. Rasco/Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)(Set Number: X164854 TK1)

Thursday’s medal games in women’s hockey will be loaded with current and former Buckeyes. There will be 11 players from Ohio State vying for gold and bronze medals in Milan, with each of the four teams featuring at least one Buckeye.

Of the 12 current and former players from Ohio State, the only one who wasn’t able to advance to the medal round is Sanni Vanhanen, as Finland was shutout 1-0 by goaltender Andrea Braendli and Switzerland in the quarterfinals.

Before the main event on Thursday afternoon, Sweden and Switzerland will square off in the morning in the bronze medal game. Sweden has won five of the six games they have played in Italy, with their only loss coming to the United States on Tuesday.

Ohio State freshman Hilda Svensson has been strong throughout the Olympics, registering five assists and an empty net goal in the 2-0 win over Czechia.

Along with Svensson’s production, teammates Jenna Raunio and Mira Jungåker have each had moments throughout the games. Jungåker opened up the Olympics with a goal and an assist in a 4-1 win over Germany in Sweden’s first game.

Jenna Raunio added two assists in the win against Germany, along with assists against Italy and Japan. If Sweden is able to win the bronze it will be their third Olympic medal in women’s ice hockey and first since 2006.

After not dressing in Switzerland’s first two Olympic games, former Ohio State goaltender Andrea Braendli has started three of the last four games in Italy. Even though Braendli was thrown into the fire in her first start, as she was tasked with trying to keep the United States out of the net.

Despite Switzerland losing 5-0, Braendli performed admirably, making 45 saves.

Following the loss to the United States, Braendli was the backup goaltender in a 3-1 loss to Finland, which was Switzerland’s final group stage game. The Swiss would square off again with Finland in the quarterfinals, and this time Braendli was the starter.

Switzerland was able to get revenge on Sanni Vanhanen and Finland, as Braendli made 40 saves in the 1-0 shutout. In the semifinals, Switzerland played Canada tough but lost 2-1. Braendli made 44 saves in the game, marking her third game in the Olympics with at least 40 saves.

If Switzerland is able to beat Sweden it will mark their second-ever bronze medal in women’s hockey.

Thursday’s gold medal game between the United States and Canada will feature seven Buckeyes. This marks the sixth time the two countries have met in the seven gold medal games in women’s hockey played in the Olympics. Canada is the defending gold medalists and will be looking to win their sixth gold medal, while the United States are seeking their third goal medal, and first since 2018.

The neighboring countries have now met in the last five gold medal games.

Team USA has three Ohio State players on their roster. Former Buckeye Hannah Bilka has been outstanding, registering four goals and three assists. Bilka scored two goals in the 5-0 win over Canada in the group stage, and followed that performance up with a goal against Italy and two assists in the semifinals against Sweden. Cayla Barnes scored the first goal in Monday’s semifinal win, which is her only point so far in the Olympics.

The only current Ohio State player on Team USA is Joy Dunne. The Missouri native has impressed in Milan, scoring two goals and dishing out three assists. Dunne did most of her damage in the group stage, with her two goals coming over the first three games, followed by two assists in the 5-0 win over Andrea Braendli and Switzerland.

Dunne, Bilka, and Barnes have all put in work to help the United States record five straight shutouts after allowing a goal in their first game against Czechia.

Despite their dominance in women’s hockey in the Olympics over the years, Canada will come into Thursday’s game as the underdog. Our neighbors to the north have four former Buckeyes on their roster. The senior member of the quartet is Natalie Spooner, who had a goal in Canada’s first game in Italy.

The other former Ohio State player to score a goal in this year’s Olympics for Canada is Jenn Gardiner. The forward found the back of the net in Canada’s 5-0 win over Finland last Thursday.

Rounding out the Ohio State influence on Team Canada are Sophie Jaques and Emma Maltais. Following a slow start to her time at the Olympics, Jaques has found her rhythm as the pressure has been turned up. The 2023 Patty Kazmaier Award winner has registered an assist in each of the last three games.

Maltais has added two assists in Canada’s six games. If Canada does happen to beat the United States, Spooner would become a three-time gold medalist, while Maltais would win her second gold medal.

The bronze medal game between Sweden and Switzerland is scheduled to start at 8:40 a.m. ET, and can be seen on USA Network and Peacock. The gold medal game between the United States and Canada is scheduled to begin at 1:10 p.m. ET and also can be seen on USA Network and Peacock.

I went back to my alma mater and saw how women’s sports have changed

Columbia's Riley Weiss reacts after a foul during the First Four round of the 2025 NCAA Tournament. Photograph: Grant Halverson/NCAA Photos/Getty Images

I’ve been going to Columbia basketball games since I was an undergraduate in the 1960s. As a junior, I did some play-by-play for WKCR, the student-run radio station. There was a time long ago when I went to almost every Lions home game. I’m talking about the men. There wasn’t a women’s basketball team until 1984. For the past few decades, I’ve watched the men play once a year.

When I enrolled at Columbia in September 1963, the Lions’ home games were played in University Hall – an antiquated gym with structural columns that impeded fans’ views and looked as though it had been built during the Age of Pericles. Columbia had suffered through six straight losing seasons. Two more followed.

The Lions’ fortunes turned during the 1965-66 campaign. Led by 7ft Dave Newmark, the team posted an 18-6 record. The future looked bright. Then Newmark put his hand through a window in a freak dormitory accident and missed the entire 1966-67 season. Without him, the team went 11-14. Still, hopes were high. Freshmen were ineligible for varsity play in those years, but Columbia’s freshman team was led by Jim McMillian and Heyward Dotson, two of the best players ever to wear a Lions uniform. Three glorious seasons followed.

Newmark was back for the 1967-68 campaign. McMillian turned out to be the greatest player in Columbia basketball history, and Dotson was superb. After three early-season losses, the Lions caught fire in December, beating West Virginia, Louisville (the No 2 team in the country) and St John’s in consecutive games to win the Holiday Festival tournament at Madison Square Garden. Those began a 16-game winning streak that culminated in an Ivy League championship and an appearance in the NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16. At one point, the Lions were ranked No 6 in the nation. It’s unlikely that an Ivy League basketball team will ever be ranked that high again.

McMillian’s departure from Columbia was followed by a series of losing campaigns. The Lions have completed only five winning seasons in the past 42 years. 1968 remains the last time the Columbia men’s basketball team was in the NCAA Tournament. In the five seasons preceding this one, the Lions had an Ivy League record of nine wins and 61 losses.

Meanwhile, the Columbia women’s basketball team have been flourishing. The Columbia women had 28 losing seasons in the 29 years ending with the 2015-16 campaign. Enter Megan Griffith, who was named head coach in March 2016.

Griffin graduated from Columbia in 2007. As a player, she averaged 10.1 points per game over the course of four seasons, captained the Lions for three years, and earned All-Ivy honors twice. But the team won just 38 games and lost 70. She then played basketball overseas and spent four years at Princeton as the recruiting coordinator and an assistant coach for the women’s team. She’s now 40 and has the bearing of the athlete she once was.

“I thought about coaching men when I was at Princeton,” Griffith says. “I asked the men’s coach if he would ever hire me. And he said, ‘Absolutely! You’d be great with the mothers.’”

That wasn’t precisely the answer that Griffith had been looking for. Would she coach men now?

“Probably not,” she says.

Griffith rebuilt the Columbia women’s program from the ground up. It wasn’t easy. Her first victory over an Ivy League team as head coach was a 91-88 quadruple-overtime triumph over Dartmouth on 27 January 2017. It took time to recruit good players and create a winning culture. But the results speak for themselves.

In the four seasons preceding this one, the Columbia women had a regular-season Ivy League record of 50-6, and an overall ledger of 100-27. Griffith is the winningest coach in Columbia women’s basketball history and has been the Ivy League women’s basketball coach of the year in each of past three seasons. Her teams have beaten opponents from the Big Ten, Big East and Atlantic Coast conferences and have tied for or won the regular-season Ivy League title in each of the past three seasons. They have yet to win the league’s postseason tournament but were invited to the NCAA Tournament in each of the past two seasons. Putting icing on the cake, last March, Columbia upset Washington 63-60 to score their first-ever NCAA Tournament victory and send the Huskies home from the dance.

Griffith knows how to teach fundamentals and motivate her players to get the most out of them. Coaches can spend hours expounding on their role, but Griffith says simply, “I see coaching as teaching and impacting positive change on lives. The players learn accountability, resilience, and how to do hard things together. Other than that, the game is as simple or as complicated as you want it to be.”

Recruiting is a neverending task. Griffith calls it “the hardest part of my job”.

The most talented high school seniors gravitate toward big-time basketball schools. The Ivy League doesn’t allow for revenue sharing with players. And even if it did, there wouldn’t be much revenue to share. The league does allow players to monetize their name, image and likeness, but there are no athletic scholarships. Moreover, a talented player may want to come to Columbia, only to be rejected by the admissions office.

The core of Griffith’s recruiting pitch is: “Come to Columbia. You’ll be getting a great education in the best city in the world. It will be a transformative experience for you.”

She could add, “We now play winning basketball.”

That brings us to this year’s Columbia women’s team. The Lions have struggled at times. “In the last two years, I had the best basketball player [Abbey Hsu] and best leader [Kitty Henderson] I’ve ever coached,” Griffith says. “And both of them graduated. That’s hard to replace.”

The Lions also played a challenging early-season schedule that included an 80-63 loss to nationally ranked North Carolina.

Sometimes everything has seemed to go right for Columbia, as it did in an 89-32 drubbing of Dartmouth and a 73-67 upset victory on the road against 19th-ranked Princeton. But there have been times when everything seemed to go wrong, as was the case with upset losses to Cornell and Penn.

“Those two losses showed us the maturity that we’re lacking as a team,” Griffith says. “Cornell and Penn played well. But if you’re an emotionally mature team like I think we’re becoming, you don’t lose those games. It taught us a lot.”

Columbia evened accounts with Cornell with an 80-55 road victory in Ithaca on 7 February. That gave the Lions a 6-2 Ivy League record, good for a second-place tie with Harvard, one game behind Princeton. This past weekend was pivotal, with back-to-back home games against Princeton and Penn. Princeton would be looking for revenge against the Lions on Friday night. One night later, Columbia would seek the same against Penn.

Like many sports fans, I’ve followed Geno Auriemma’s accomplishments at UConn and took note when Caitlin Clark set the basketball world ablaze. I watch a handful of NCAA women’s tournament games on television each year and am familiar with names such as Dawn Staley, Kim Mulkey and Chris Dailey. But I’d never been to a women’s college basketball game. I decided to go to the Princeton and Penn games last weekend.

Columbia’s main campus stretches from 114th to 120th Streets between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue and looks remarkably similar to how it did a half-century ago. There’s an aura of classical elegance. Fourteen massive columns rise to the facade of Butler Library where eight names are chiseled in stone: “Homer. Herodotus. Sophocles. Plato. Aristotle. Demosthenes. Cicero. Virgil.” Low Library is equally inspiring with a facade that tells of Columbia’s founding as King’s College in 1754.

Levien Gymnasium, which opened in 1974, seats 2,700 fans for basketball. In Griffith’s first year as coach, the women averaged 627 fans per game and the men 1,625. Last season, the women averaged 1,602, reaching 2,307 for the season finale against Cornell that clinched the Ivy League regular-season title for Columbia.

Before going to the games, I talked with Dave Kindred, the octogenarian sportswriter who has won enough sports journalism awards to hang a plaque on every wall in his home. In 2010, when his sportswriting days on the national stage came to an end, Kindred went to a high school basketball game to see the daughter of friends play. Before long, he was hooked. In 2023, My Home Team: A Sportswriter’s Life and the Redemptive Power of Small-Town Girls Basketball – possibly the best book ever written about women’s basketball – was published.

“I saw a thousand men’s basketball games before I started watching the women,” Kindred told me. “And now, I actually like watching the women more. The basics are the same. The women know how to play. Their competitiveness and the desire to win are just as strong as with the men. They dive for loose balls with the same ferocity as the men. But the women play more of a team game

“The men do things that the women can’t do,” Kindred continued. “They jump higher and run faster. The men play a vertical game. The women play a horizontal game. The men play in the air. The women play on the floor. The men can create plays by themselves. The women, except for a few superstars, need help. So what happens is, the women compensate by helping each other. They make three passes to get to the same point on the floor that a man gets to on his own. In a way, the women now play like the men used to play when I was young.”

Those words rang true as I watched the Lions play on Friday and Saturday night.

Columbia’s most complete player this season has been junior guard Riley Weiss – a five-time Ivy League player of the week who also leads the league in scoring with 19.7 points per game. Susie Rafiu and Perri Page are major contributors and the only seniors on the squad. Junior Fliss Henderson is the Lions’ leading rebounder. Like their teammates, these are formidable athletes – well-conditioned, fast and strong. And they understand technical intricacies of the game that most fans don’t even know exist.

There was a sense of anticipation as tip-off for Columbia v Princeton neared on Friday. The betting spread favored Princeton by 4.5 points.

The game started poorly for Columbia. The Lions’ shots weren’t falling. Rafiu picked up two fouls in less than seven minutes. Princeton led 20-11 after the first quarter and stretched their lead to 29-18. The margin narrowed to 31-25 at the half but Columbia were lucky to be that close. The Lions had shot a dismal 10-for-28 from the field. The Princeton defense had smothered Weiss, who was 1-for-7 from the floor. Ten points, five rebounds and stellar defense from Page had kept Columbia in the game.

Then everything changed. Basketball is a game where the better team can beat the better players. Columbia began playing well as a team at both ends of the court. Weiss got hot, finishing the contest with 23 points on 7-for-9 shooting in the second half. Page had a career-high 25 points and dominated the boards in tandem with Henderson. Columbia outscored Princeton 22-10 in the third quarter. The fourth quarter brought the same. The crowd of 2,014 stood and roared its approval during the closing seconds. Final score: Columbia 70-56 Princeton.

Saturday night was more of the same. Griffith had to keep the team focused. The Princeton game was in the past. This was Penn. But the Lions started with a vengeance, playing suffocating defense and opening a 27-7 lead midway through the second quarter. Columbia were doing most things right. And Penn were doing most things wrong. The Lions’ intensity faded as the game went on. “Second half, we were not very good,” Griffith acknowledged afterward. But they were good enough for a 69-56 victory.

Columbia and Princeton (8-2) are tied for first place in the Ivy League, with Harvard and Brown a game behind at 7-3. Each team have four regular-season games to play and are all but certain to qualify for the four-team postseason tournament that will decide who gets the Ivy League’s automatic qualifying bid to the NCAA Tournament. Should the Lions fall short in the Ivy tournament, an “at large” bid to participate in the NCAA Tournament will still be possible.

Beyond that, the future looks bright. Griffith says the freshman class that will enter Columbia this fall is “the best recruiting class we’ve ever had” with blue-chip prospects coming from California, England and Australia. Equally important, $8m out of a recent $10m gift from Jonathan and Jeannie Lavine to Columbia’s basketball program has been earmarked for the women. “That,” Griffith notes, “gives us long-term financial stability for the first time.”

Griffith takes pride in the fact that, in all her years as head coach, not a single Columbia player has transferred to another Division I school. It speaks to the loyalty she inspires and the culture that she has created. She has built a good program, not just a good team. But there’s a question that has to be asked.

Griffith is an exceptionally good coach. It’s inevitable that she’ll receive lucrative offers from big-time colleges. Will there come a time when she leaves Columbia?

“I love change,” Griffith answers. “But I have a strong sense of pride in Columbia. I’ve grown up here. I’m a Columbia alumna in addition to coaching here. I love it that, every year, we have changed so much. And I haven’t accomplished everything that I want to do here. The job isn’t done yet.”

  • Thomas Hauser’s email address is thomashauserwriter@gmail.com. The audio version of his memoir – My Mother And Me– was recently released. The reading is by Hauser’s good friend, Jim Lampley. In 2019, Hauser was selected for boxing’s highest honor – induction into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.

When is the Olympics figure skating gala? Time, TV schedule, channel, live stream to watch 2026 exhibition skate

2026 Winter Olympics Figure Skating

When is the Olympics figure skating gala? Time, TV schedule, channel, live stream to watch 2026 exhibition skate originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

One of the most entertaining Olympic events takes place after all the medals are already handed out — the Milan Cortina 2026 figure skating gala will captivate fans Saturday.

A celebration of the Games and the top athletes' accomplishments, this year's most prominent skaters will return to the Milano Ice Skating Arena for a 2.5-hour spectacle. Rather than seeing cutthroat competition, viewers will get to experience their favorites have complete creative freedom on the ice. 

The exhibition gala is a long-running tradition in professional figure skating, and is considered a great honor for all skaters involved. An invite-only event, the gala usually features medalists from all four disciplines, as well as any fan-favorite athletes from the Games.

Be sure to tune in for this one-of-a-kind event.

Here's everything you need to know about the 2026 Olympic figure skating gala, including TV channel and streaming options for the exhibition skate.

When is the Olympics figure skating gala?

  • Date: Saturday, Feb. 21
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET

The 2026 Olympic figure skating gala will take place on Saturday, Feb. 21 starting at 2 p.m. ET. 

Where to watch Olympics figure skating gala: TV channel, live stream

  • TV channel: NBC
  • Live stream: Peacock

The 2026 Olympic figure skating gala will be broadcast live on NBC. Fans and cord-cutters can also stream the extravagant event live with Peacock.

Peacock will carry every event of the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics live. The NBC-owned streaming service's sports programming features live coverage of NFL Sunday Night Football, the NBA, the Olympic and Paralympic Games, Premier League soccer, Big Ten football and basketball, Notre Dame football, Big East and Big 12 basketball, PGA Tour golf, and more.

2026 Olympics figure skating gala skaters

The full list of performers for the 2026 gala has not yet been announced. The lineup should include medal winners from all four disciplines. 

Italian skater and Milan Cortina 2026 ambassador Carolina Kostner, who won bronze in Sochi 12 years ago, will lead off the gala with a special performance. 

The gala generally concludes with a choreographed group skate featuring all of the performers from the event. 

Olympics figure skating venue 2026

  • Venue: Milano Ice Skating Arena

The figure skating gala at the 2026 Winter Olympics will take place at the Milano Ice Skating Arena, also known as the Unipol Forum.

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Where to watch Celtic vs. VfB Stuttgart live stream, TV channel, start time for Europa League match

Benjamin Nygren Celtic

Where to watch Celtic vs. VfB Stuttgart live stream, TV channel, start time for Europa League match originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The knockout round of the Europa League playoffs is underway. Who will stand tall when Celtic hosts VfB Stuttgart?

Third in the Scottish Premiership, Celtic have gone on a five-match win streak. The last Europa League match was a draw against Bologna which saw them finish 21st in the standings.

Stuttgart finished 11th in the Europa League table and four points better off than their opponents today.

The Sporting News looks at the key details ahead of this game, including how to watch the match, kickoff times and the weekly schedule.

Celtic vs. VfB Stuttgartlive stream, TV channel

Here's how to watch this Europa League match in the U.S.:

This match between Celtic and VfB Stuttgart will be streamed exclusively on Paramount+, where every single UEFA match can be found in the United States.

Every single game from the Champions League, Europa League, and Conference League is accessible in one place on Paramount+.

What time does Celtic vs. VfB Stuttgartkick off?

This Europa League clash takes place at Celtic Park in Glasgow, Scotland and kicks off on Thursday, February 19 at 8 p.m. local time.

Here's how that time translates across the U.S.:

DateKickoff time
Eastern TimeThurs., Feb. 193:00 p.m.
Central TimeThurs., Feb. 192:00 p.m. 
Mountain TimeThurs., Feb. 191:00 p.m.
Pacific TimeThurs., Feb. 1912:00 p.m.

Europa League fixture schedule this week

Thursday, February 19

  • Dinamo Zagreb vs. Racing Genk (12:45 p.m. ET)
  • Fenerbahce vs. Nottingham Forest (12:45 p.m. ET)
  • PAOK Salonika vs. Celta Vigo (12:45 p.m. ET)
  • SK Brann vs. Bologna (12:45 p.m. ET)
  • Celtic vs. VfB Stuttgart (3 p.m. ET)
  • Lille vs. Red Star Belgrade (3 p.m. ET) 
  • Ludogorets Razgrad vs. Ferencvaros (3 p.m. ET) 
  • Panathinaikos vs. Viktoria Plzen (3 p.m. ET)

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Lille predicted XI v Crvena Zvezda: Gaetan Perrin to start

Lille predicted XI v Crvena Zvezda: Gaetan Perrin to start
Lille predicted XI v Crvena Zvezda: Gaetan Perrin to start

Whilst Bruno Genesio announced yesterday that Gaetan Perrin is not fit enough to play a whole 90 minutes, the former AJ Auxerre forward may start for Lille OSC when they face Crvena Zvezda in the first leg of their UEFA Europa League playoff on Thursday night. 

Lille are contending with plenty of absentees. Alexsandro is not fit enough to participate, whilst Thomas Meunier, Ethan Mbappé, Hamza Igamane, and Isame Sahraoui are all also out with injuries. Speaking pre-match, Genesio revealed that André Gomes wouldn’t be involved either. The former Everton and Barcelona midfielder is nearing a departure from the club; it is thought that he is set for a move to the MLS. Marius Broholm, meanwhile, is ineligible. Noah Edjouma returns from a short period of injury-related absence. 

Lille likely line-up v Crvena Zvezda

Berke Ozer; Romain Perraud, Aissa Mandi, Chancel Mbemba, Ayyoub Bouaddi; Benjamin André, Hakon Arnar Haraldsson; Matias Fernandez-Pardo, Gaetan Perrin, Félix Correia; Olivier Giroud. (L’Éq)

GFFN | Luke Entwistle

Barcelona given high chance of signing central defender if Deco pulls trigger on offer

Barcelona given high chance of signing central defender if Deco pulls trigger on offer
Barcelona given high chance of signing central defender if Deco pulls trigger on offer

Barcelona have been struggling this season at the back, and while a replacement for the ageing Robert Lewandowski is seemingly the priority while Deco remains Director of Football, a central defender is their second priority. It is not yet clear how much they will have to spend in the summer, but they do have at least one affordable option that they have a good chance of signing.

Inigo Martinez, Barcelona’s only left-footed central defender, left in the summer, and Pau Cubarsi has been for the most part played alongside Eric Garcia. However with the team as a whole struggling, their partnership has not stood out as particularly successful either.

Barcelona the preferred option for Marcos Senesi

Image via Getty Images.

The Blaugrana have looked at the likes of Alessandro Bastoni of Inter, or Josko Gvardiol of Manchester City as ideal options, but a much cheaper option linked in January was Marcos Senesi. The Bournemouth defender is out of contract in the summer, and is set to leave the club on a free. TeamTalk say that Barcelona are a ‘huge lure’ for Senesi, and that it would be ‘tough to ignore’.

Barcelona have reportedly accelerated talks for Senesi, and are preparing an offer which his camp believe is the most intriguing so far.

Plenty of other offers likely to arrive for Senesi

Given his low cost, it is no surprise that a number of clubs are interested in the Argentina international. Atletico Madrid have expressed an interest in him, while in Serie A, Napoli have done the same, and Juventus have been in talks with his agents over a deal.

On the other hand, his most lucrative offer may well come from the Premier League. Tottenham Hotspur, Everton, Aston Villa, Newcastle United, Sunderland and Chelsea have all expressed an interest, although the latter have not been in touch with his agents lately.

Senesi would certainly be a cut-price option that would fit the bill for Barcelona, who are in desperate need of defensive reinforcements. On the other hand, it seems likely they will wait until the summer to have a better idea of what resources they have to spend, and run the risk of Senesi taking his business elsewhere.

FC Barcelona News: 19 February 2026

MADRID, SPAIN - FEBRUARY 05: Alexia Putellas of FC Barcelona is challenged by Sara Dabritz of Real Madrid during the Copa de la Reina Quarter Final match between Real Madrid and FC Barcelona at Estadio Alfredo Di Stefano on February 05, 2026 in Madrid, Spain. (Photo by Angel Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Gavi continues recovery – FC Barcelona
Gavi is taking things step by step at the Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper. The FC Barcelona midfielder is fully immersed in his recovery process from an internal meniscus injury.

Barça foiled by the frame 25 times – FC Barcelona
Flick’s side lead the way for most efforts hitting the woodwork across the major European leagues.

Real Madrid next up for Barça in the Women’s Champions League – FC Barcelona
Next opponent in the Women’s Champions League quarterfinals confirmed for FC Barcelona. The blaugranes had finished top of the League Phase and they now know will face Real Madrid in the WCL quarterfinal knockout round.

Gerard Martín is not listening to Milan – Mundo Deportivo
In recent days, the Barcelona defender has been linked with the Italian club, but the player has no interest in leaving because he feels he is fulfilling a dream and is important.

Man United burst onto the scene for Balde – Mundo Deportivo
The FC Barcelona full-back, who is under contract until 2028, has appeared on the radar of the English club, who would consider an offer of around 40 million euros.

Man Utd chiefs REGRET Marcus Rashford deal and believe he is now worth £50m – Mirror
Senior figures at Manchester United left scratching their heads at the terms of the deal that is expected to see them sell Marcus Rashford to Barcelona for just £26m this summer.

2030 World Cup final: Joan Laporta's unexpected statement on Camp Nou!

2030 World Cup final: Joan Laporta's unexpected statement on Camp Nou!
2030 World Cup final: Joan Laporta's unexpected statement on Camp Nou!

2030 World Cup final at Camp Nou: Laporta remains realistic

Joan Laporta / @x.com/JoanLaportaFCB/

Joan Laporta, former president of FC Barcelona and current candidate, made headline-grabbing statements regarding the possibility of hosting the 2030 World Cup final at Camp Nou, a tournament to be co-hosted by Spain, Portugal, and Morocco.

2030 World Cup final at Camp Nou: Laporta remains realistic

While the announcement by the mayor of Barcelona sparked huge excitement over the potential designation of Camp Nou as the final venue, Laporta took a more measured stance.

According to the Spanish daily Mundo Deportivo, he explained that the prospect remains possible, but is contingent on several key conditions.

The former president emphasized that the challenge is not limited to completing the stadium's renovation. He stressed the importance of adapting the entire surrounding area to meet FIFA's requirements, which means urban planning adjustments in coordination with the city council.

“It would be magnificent for the 2030 World Cup final to be played at Camp Nou, but there is still a lot of work to do,” he stated.

He added: “We must adapt the urban development plan in collaboration with the city council, because FIFA's requirements involve the complete redevelopment of the area around the stadium, not just finishing the construction work.”

Finally, Laporta mentioned the need to reach an agreement with the Liga Nacional de Fútbol Profesional to postpone home matches at Camp Nou until the renovation is fully completed, confirming the club's preference to settle permanently in their own stadium rather than returning to Montjuïc.

Arne Slot gives injury updates on Frimpong, Isak, Gomez and Endo ahead of Forest clash

Arne Slot gives injury updates on Frimpong, Isak, Gomez and Endo ahead of Forest clash
Arne Slot gives injury updates on Frimpong, Isak, Gomez and Endo ahead of Forest clash

Arne Slot has provided injury updates on Liverpool quartet Jeremie Frimpong, Alexander Isak, Joe Gomez and Wataru Endo ahead of the Reds’ return to Premier League action against Nottingham Forest on Sunday.

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While our long-serving number 2 has appeared off the bench in the wins over Sunderland and Brighton, the others have all been sidelined in recent weeks, with the Japanese midfielder suffering a serious setback in the victory at the Stadium of Light.

The glut of defensive injuries has led the LFC head coach to deploy several midfielders at right-back over the past few games, but thankfully it looks as though he may have a more natural option for that role at the City Ground this coming weekend.

(Photo by George Wood/Getty Images)

Slot provides injury updates on Liverpool quartet

Slot held his pre-match press conference on Thursday morning, and he provided a mixture of good and bad news with his injury updates on the aforementioned Liverpool quartet, as outlined below (via Liverpool Echo):

Frimpong: “Jeremie will not be involved this weekend. We hope he will be involved next week if things go as planned.”

Endo: “Wata will be out for a long time. We don’t know exactly how long.”

Gomez: “I think Joe is ready to start [against Forest]. Yes, he is.”

Isak: “Alex has been on the [training] pitch with his running shoes for the first time this week, so it will still be a while…It will be somewhere around the international break. That depends on whether he has a setback. It’ll be the end of March, start of April when he’s back with the group, but it doesn’t mean he’s ready to start playing straight away.”

(Photo by Alex Pantling/Getty Images)

Gomez return will be especially welcome for Liverpool

Dealing firstly with the short-term updates, it’s unfortunate that the Forest game will come a bit too soon for Frimpong, but Slot’s reassurance that Gomez is ‘ready to start’ will be music to Liverpool fans’ ears.

In four matches since the Dutchman suffered his injury against Qarabag in late January, three different midfielders have been selected to start at right-back, so it’ll be a relief to finally see a more natural option in that role on Sunday.

That’s not being disrespectful to those who filled in to plug the gap – those who did have our immense gratitude for taking on that responsibility for the team’s benefit.

Over the longer-term, there finally seems to be some light at the end of the tunnel for Isak, even though Slot is understandably preaching caution given the striker’s fitness issues since his big-money move from Newcastle last year.

If Liverpool’s record signing is cleared to return after the international break, having him available for the post-Easter run-in could be huge. As brilliantly as Hugo Ekitike has performed in his absence, the Frenchman is being constantly asked to go to the well for his team, and he could do with an occasional breather in the coming weeks.

The Reds boss had recently said he’s hopeful of Endo returning before the season is out, and right now that’d appear to be the best-case scenario for the Japanese midfielder, whose injury blow at Sunderland left his teammates ‘gutted’, in Virgil van Dijk’s words.

Hopefully he and Isak will make smooth progress with their longer-term issues, and fingers crossed that we might have Frimpong back for the home clash against West Ham at the end of this month.

Salah names the two Liverpool players who stood out in training from day one

Salah names the two Liverpool players who stood out in training from day one
Salah names the two Liverpool players who stood out in training from day one

Mo Salah has picked out two familiar names when asked which Liverpool players stood out to him in training when he first arrived at the club.

The 33-year-old Egypt international was posed a simple question by the club’s official X account and his answer was immediate.

“I would say Philippe Coutinho and Adam [Lallana], so both, yeah.”

For Liverpool supporters, it is an interesting snapshot of a dressing room era that helped shape what came next, because Philippe Coutinho’s technical quality and Adam Lallana’s intensity were two defining traits of that squad.

It also lands at a time when Mo Salah’s own standards are constantly being judged, even though his role in Arne Slot’s side remains central on and off the ball.

What Salah’s Coutinho and Lallana answer tells us

There is a reason Mo Salah’s comments resonate, because the winger is widely seen as one of the hardest workers at Kirkby, with his gym routines and consistency often highlighted in discussions around Liverpool professionalism.

So when he points to “standouts” from the day he arrived, it is a compliment from someone who has spent his Liverpool career raising the bar.

Coutinho was never a physical monster, but the Brazilian’s first touch, scanning and ability to play at speed would have popped in any session.

Lallana, meanwhile, built a reputation for being relentless in pressing drills and small-sided games, and it makes sense that a new arrival would notice that edge quickly.

If anything, our No.11’s answer also reinforces something we know about Liverpool teams at their best: the technical quality has to be matched by a willingness to suffer in training.

Salah’s 2025/26 numbers show influence even without peak output

Image via @LFC on X

Sofascore data underlines that Salah has still been productive, even if the goals are not at the absurd pace we associate with his best seasons.

That combination of assists, key passes and chance creation suggests he is still driving our attack, even when finishing has not been as ruthless as usual.

It’s also worth noting that the winger is coming off a huge performance against Brighton, which is the kind of display that always changes the temperature around him.

Why Salah’s comments matter with exit talk bubbling again

(Photo by Carl Recine/Getty Images)

John Aldridge has already summed up the uncertainty around Salah’s longer-term future in a way that feels realistic from the outside.

“You’ve got to ask the manager and Mo himself – we don’t know the situation.”

The former Liverpool striker also pointed to the attitude we have seen recently.

“He’s come back and he’s putting a shift in, he’s trying to prove a point and that’s all you want – Mo scoring goals, because we need him.”

On the other side, Tim Sherwood has gone very strong in the opposite direction, predicting an exit.

“In my opinion, I think he 100% leaves that club…”

That context is exactly why a simple training-centre quote about Coutinho and Lallana can travel, because it reminds everyone how long Salah has been setting standards at Liverpool, and how much the club’s culture has mattered to him since day one.

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Tacchinardi argues former Juventus manager would avoided big defeat to Galatasaray

Tacchinardi argues former Juventus manager would avoided big defeat to Galatasaray
Tacchinardi argues former Juventus manager would avoided big defeat to Galatasaray

Former Juventus midfielder Alessio Tacchinardi believes the team would have escaped with a better result against Galatasaray if they had Max Allegri in charge.

The Bianconeri suffered an agonising defeat in the first leg of the Champions League playoffs. In the first half, they turned the result upside-down thanks to Teun Koopmeiners’ brace. However, they fell apart after the break, partially due to Gleison Bremer’s injury.

The Turkish giants scored two goals to retake the lead, and were then given a numerical advantage following Juan Cabal’s dismissal.

Sensing the opportunity to open up a big gap before the return leg in Turin, Galatasaray kept coming forward, and they managed to add two more goals, ending the contest 5-2.

Alessio Tacchinardi believes Juventus needed a pragmatic manager like Max Allegri

This result means that Juventus have a daunting task next Wednesday, as they must cut a three-goal deficit just to equalise the scoring on aggregate.

Since his arrival in Turin in early November, Luciano Spalletti has been widely praised for the noticeable improvement in terms of results and performances.

Luciano Spalletti and Max Allegri (Photo by Francesco Pecoraro/Getty Images)

However, Tacchinardi argues that a pragmatic, defensive-minded manager like Allegri would have been able to mitigate the damage once his team was reduced to 10 men.

“In the second half, you had to park the bus and clear the ball out of your area,” said the 50-year-old in his interview with IlBianconero.

“Instead, you end up conceding five… With Allegri, it would’ve finished 3–2.”

The Derby d’Italia effect & Koopmeiners’ ‘revival’

Tacchinardi feels Juventus were physically and mentally exhausted in the aftermath of their controversial Derby d’Italia defeat three days earlier and all the drama that ensued on and off the pitch, while arguing that the team lacks quality depth.

“In Milan, Juve played, ran, actually played football. I’m convinced no one slept after that match. The next day was the worst, because you had to travel immediately to Turkiye. This team has 11 players who can help you — the others can’t.”

Finally, the former Juventus star is hoping that Koopmeiners’ brace proves to be the beginning of a more prosperous chapter.

“Credit to Koopmeiners, I hope it’s a rebirth. He scored twice yesterday, and the second was a beauty.

“Of course, it must be noted that his first goal came in February… Until yesterday, he hadn’t even provided an assist.”

AFC Elite Champions League: Mahrez and Aouar included in team of the group stage

AFC Elite Champions League: Mahrez and Aouar included in team of the group stage
AFC Elite Champions League: Mahrez and Aouar included in team of the group stage

Mahrez and Aouar named in the team of the group stage of the AFC Elite Champions League

Mahrez et Aouar/@DZ Foot

The group stage of the AFC Elite Champions League wrapped up on Thursday, with eight teams from each of the two groups booking their spots in the next round.

Among the heavyweights who lived up to expectations were Al-Hilal, Al-Ahli, Al-Ittihad, and Al-Sadd in the “West” group, while Vissel Kobe, Sanfrecce, Buriram United, and Melbourne City advanced from the “East.”

At the end of this opening phase, Sofascore revealed the team of the group stage, which features two African stars: Algerian Houssem Aouar (Al-Ittihad) and his compatriot Riyad Mahrez (Al-Ahli Saudi). Aouar earned an overall rating of 7.77, while Mahrez received a 7.54.

Despite being joint top scorer with Aouar on six goals, Adil Boulbina was not selected, even though he played a major role in Al-Duhail’s qualification for the round of 16.

The most represented club in this best XI is Al-Hilal, the group leader. The Saudi side boasts four players in the lineup, with Ruben Neves earning the highest individual rating (7.93).

Here’s the team of the group stage: Beiranvand – Smaeilifar – Akçiçek, Ibanez, Hernandez, Neves, Milinkovic-Savic, Aouar, Mahrez, Lingard, Silva.

HEINEKEN® IS THE NEW OFFICIAL BEER PARTNER OF JUVENTUS FOOTBALL CLUB

HEINEKEN® IS THE NEW OFFICIAL BEER PARTNER OF JUVENTUS FOOTBALL CLUB
HEINEKEN® IS THE NEW OFFICIAL BEER PARTNER OF JUVENTUS FOOTBALL CLUB

Juventus Football Club and Heineken® are pleased to announce a new multi‑year partnership aimed at enhancing the fan experience and strengthening the bond between the Club and its supporters. Effective today, Heineken® will be the Official Beer Partner of the historic Italian Club: a collaboration that unites two iconic brands, driven by international appeal and shared values, and which builds on Heineken®’s long‑standing global relationship with the world of football.

This partnership was created with the goal of further elevating the fan experience at the Allianz Stadium, making every moment of the match‑day more engaging, immersive and memorable. Through dedicated activations, experiential areas and post‑match entertainment moments, the partnership introduces an innovative model of interaction that aims to strengthen the connection between Juventus and its fans, celebrating the rituality and sense of community that define the stadium experience.

Heineken® will in fact be present inside the Allianz Stadium, accompanying Juventus fans throughout the entire match‑day experience with a program of dedicated activations designed to make it even more engaging and memorable.

After every home match, the Club Sivori, the exclusive hospitality within the stadium, will host the Heineken® Extra Time Experience: a signature moment curated by the brand to bring guests and fans together in an authentic and shared celebration.

Since 2011, when Juventus became the first Italian Club to inaugurate a privately owned stadium, the Allianz Stadium has set a benchmark for live experience excellence. Thanks to continual technological innovation and an ever‑evolving entertainment offering, the venue now records an occupancy rate above 98% and welcomes over 4,200 guests across its seven hospitality areas at every match, confirming its status as one of the leading stadiums in European football.

A long‑standing global player in the world of sport, Heineken® has built over time a deep connection with football and its fans, creating shared experiences, inspiring and enabling fans to meet other fans to experience the event together, with a Heineken®, and celebrating the connection, culture, and inclusivity of fandom. The partnership with Juventus marks the beginning of a new chapter for the brand in football: a journey that strengthens dialogue with one of the most recognised and passionate fanbases worldwide, a community that lives football as a shared ritual capable of bringing together different generations, cultures and stories.

“We are proud to announce this partnership with Heineken, bringing together two of the world’s most iconic brands and businesses. Heineken's decision to partner with Juventus further reflects the strength and global positioning of our brand and our unrivalled position as the most globally supported Italian team. This collaboration also aims to further elevate the fan experience across all areas of the Allianz Stadium, a venue that records the highest occupancy rate in Serie A and delivers an excellent fan experience across the whole stadium,” commented Peter Silverstone, Chief Business Officer of Juventus.

“This partnership represents an extremely important opportunity for Heineken® to strengthen its connection with the world of football—a universal language capable of uniting people and passions around the globe. Together with Juventus Football Club, one of the most beloved teams in Italy and followed internationally, we aim to create unique experiences that engage fans of all generations and celebrate the passion, sharing and sense of belonging that make football such a special sport,” said Michela Filippi, Marketing Director of HEINEKEN Italy.

Cup of Cavs: NBA news and links for Thursday, Feb. 19

BOSTON, MA - DECEMBER 14: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers during the second quarter against the Boston Celtics at TD Garden on December 14, 2023 in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, it’s Thursday, February 19th. The Cleveland Cavaliers are 34-21 and finally play basketball again for the first time since last Wednesday.

A lot has happened since we last previewed a Cavs game. I totaled my car. Jaylon Tyson and Donovan Mitchell competed in All-Star weekend. And, Cleveland went a few days in a row without snowing or dipping below freezing. All in all, not too bad.

The Cavs will host the Brooklyn Nets tonight at 7 PM. Cleveland is 1-0 against the Nets this season.

Today’s Game of the Day

  • Detroit Pistons at New York Knicks – 7:30 PM, Prime Video

There’s a power vacuum in the East this season. And even with the best record in basketball, the Pistons are still trying to prove that they belong at the top of the conference. A showdown with the Knicks could help them earn some more goodwill.

But, as Cavs fans know, the only way to beat the ‘regular season merchant’ accusations is to prove it in the playoffs. A win tonight won’t cement the Pistons. But it could be a fun statement game regardless.

The rest of the NBA schedule

  • Indiana Pacers at Washington Wizards – 7 PM
  • Atlanta Hawks at Philadelphia 76ers – 7 PM
  • Houston Rockets at Charlotte Hornets – 7 PM
  • Toronto Raptors at Chicago Bulls – 8 PM
  • Phoenix Suns at San Antonio Spurs – 8:30 PM
  • Orlando Magic at Sacramento Kings – 10 PM
  • Boston Celtics at Golden State Warriors – 10 PM
  • Denver Nuggets at LA Clippers – 10:30 PM

Cavs links of the day

NBA links

OM: Medhi Benatia explains the decision to appoint Habib Beye

OM: Medhi Benatia explains the decision to appoint Habib Beye
OM: Medhi Benatia explains the decision to appoint Habib Beye

The reasons behind Habib Beye's appointment at OM

OM: Medhi Benatia explains the decision to appoint Habib Beye

On Wednesday night, Habib Beye was officially announced as OM's new head coach. Medhi Benatia defends his decision to appoint the Senegalese manager.

Responsible for Habib Beye's appointment, Medhi Benatia stood by his choice. The OM sporting director emphasized the profile and determination of his new coach.

"The choice of Habib Beye as OM’s new manager is fully in line with our desire to bring in a coach with the leadership qualities needed to take charge of a squad that clearly needs to be galvanized after a challenging period on the pitch. From our very first discussions, he struck me as extremely committed and totally focused on the future, with clear objectives for everyone: to quickly get back to winning ways, to aim for a podium finish in Ligue 1, and to try to win the Coupe de France to bring a trophy to the people of Marseille.", said the Moroccan.

Player chooses Barcelona over Arsenal as his next club

Player chooses Barcelona over Arsenal as his next club
Player chooses Barcelona over Arsenal as his next club

Arsenal have reportedly suffered a setback in their pursuit of Julian Alvarez from Atletico Madrid. The forward has been a target for the Gunners as they look to further strengthen their squad ahead of the summer transfer window. His quality and experience make him an attractive option for a team aiming to maintain its momentum across multiple competitions.

The club are reportedly willing to spend up to 100 million euros to secure Alvarez’s signature. The Argentinian has already proven himself both in England and on the international stage, and his winning mentality could provide a boost to a squad that currently lacks players with extensive trophy-winning experience. While Arsenal have bolstered their squad in recent windows, the addition of a player of Alvarez’s pedigree would represent a significant step forward.

Player’s Preference Creates Challenge

However, Arsenal may face a major obstacle in persuading Alvarez to join. As cited by Shoot, the forward does not favour a return to England and is reportedly inclined to move to Barcelona instead. This presents a clear challenge for the Gunners, as a player’s personal preference is often decisive in high-profile transfers. Convincing him to change his mind could prove difficult, even with a substantial financial offer.

(Photo by Angel Martinez/Getty Images)

Barcelona in Favourable Position

According to the same report, unless Barcelona decide against pursuing him, Alvarez is expected to choose the Catalan club as his next destination. For Arsenal, this could necessitate a reassessment of their summer strategy and alternative targets if they are unable to persuade him to reconsider a move back to the Premier League. The situation highlights the competitive nature of the transfer market and the importance of aligning club ambitions with player intentions.

The coming months will be crucial for Arsenal as they attempt to navigate these challenges and ensure they continue strengthening their squad effectively. Securing top-quality additions remains a priority, but player preferences and competition from other clubs will play a major role in determining the outcome of this potential transfer.

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Golden Nuggets: Vamos 49ers

MEXICO CITY, MEXICO - NOVEMBER 21: Fred Warner #54 of the San Francisco 49ers take the field before the game against the Arizona Cardinals at Estadio Azteca on November 21, 2022 in Mexico City, Mexico. (Photo by Michael Zagaris/San Francisco 49ers/Getty Images) | Getty Images

49ers returning to Mexico City for second international game of 2026 NFL season
“The 49ers are designated the home team for the game in Mexico City, while the Rams are the home team for the game in Melbourne, Australia. San Francisco will play eight games at Levi’s Stadium, seven true road games and two international games to comprise its 17-game regular season schedule. 

The 49ers’ opponent in Mexico City, as well as the date and kickoff time, will be announced when the full schedule is released in the spring, according to the NFL.” 

Offseason Mailbag: Will the 49ers actually address O-Line? (Paywall)
Kawachipto on YouTtube asks: What is the biggest shift/change you predict Morris brings to the defensive scheme? 

More man coverage and Cover-6, with a heavy lean on Renardo Green. That’s a pure guess because we won’t have a real clue until they add new players. Morris is a polyglot of scheme. 

But Green, I think, is the ideal person to want to coach up, and the 49ers’ frustrations are, in large part, due to Green’s upside. I think he’s a much better corner than Deommodore Lenoir, or at least, can be. I think they’ll want to get the best out of him, specifically. 

Duxstar-Niners on YouTube asks: If the niners realized they needed to actually invest in the Oline this year and take a Tackle is there any worth taking if they fall ? Also do you think the Niners should take a safety in the first round if available? 

1. Yes. I could see a few scenarios where they have viable options. Buuuut, they’d all have to be tackle/guard viable. They’re picky. They need to have tackle upside but immediate guard utility. That’s not Monroe Freeling, though he’s typically fit the mold of their tackles. The options are Caleb Lomu and Kadyn Proctor. 2. I would probably lean no in this class. I like Thieneman, but I’m not sure he shifts the paradigm enough. Emmanuel McNeil-Warren is sick, but I’m not convinced he’s a true single-high player.” 

49ers mailbag: How can they catch Seahawks, Rams? How to help Nick Bosa? (Paywall)
Yes, the 49ers have a type — big and brawny — when it comes to their defensive ends. They want them to be sturdy enough as run defenders to “set the edge” — not allowing running backs to get to the sideline by fending off perimeter blocks by tackles and tight ends. 

Bosa is 6-foot-4, 266 pounds. Yetur Gross-Matos: 6-5, 265. Clelin Ferrell: 6-4, 265. Sam Okuayinonu: 6-1, 269. See a pattern? 

That said, Shanahan never sounded more willing to tweak his defensive philosophy last month before replacing coordinator Robert Saleh with Raheem Morris, who doesn’t have a background in the 49ers’ 4-3, Seattle-style scheme. Notably, he hired Morris instead of in-house candidate Gus Bradley, who helped popularize the system the 49ers have run since Shanahan was hired. 

“That’s how this league works now,” Shanahan said of becoming less predictable on defense. “Offensive coaches know how to attack things too much and so you have to (increase) the variables on what they know they’re going to get.”

It’s possible tweaks to the defensive front could prompt the 49ers to cast a wider net when it comes to edge rushers, allowing them to increase their draft odds on hitting on the right prospect.” 

Maxx Crosby to 49ers? Adam Schefter reveals the likely trade cost
“I was told that the Raiders don’t want to trade [Maxx Crosby], and if they even contemplated it, then it would take a Micah Parsons-type package. That’s what I was told,” Schefter said on Philadelphia area radio station 97.5 The Fanatic while discussing a potential Crosby-to-Eagles scenario. “Do I think they are getting two firsts and a player? No. Do I think they want to trade him? No. Do I think he’ll be traded like A.J. Brown [could be]? That’ll change by the week.”

UEFA Champions League: Mbappé, Gordon, Kane... the top scorers ranking

UEFA Champions League: Mbappé, Gordon, Kane... the top scorers ranking
UEFA Champions League: Mbappé, Gordon, Kane... the top scorers ranking

Mbappé, Gordon, Kane... the UEFA Champions League top scorers ranking

Osimhen/@Goal

Scoring four goals against Qarabağ FK (1-6) in the 3rd, 32nd, 33rd, and 45+1st minutes, Anthony Gordon has climbed the ranks among the top scorers in the UEFA Champions League.

The Newcastle winger now has 10 goals in the Champions League this season and sits second in the table behind Kylian Mbappé (13 goals). The French international remained scoreless during Real Madrid's trip to Benfica (0-1) on Tuesday.

Harry Kane is third with 8 goals, while Erling Haaland is fourth with 7, both spared the play-offs as Bayern Munich and Manchester City have already booked their spots in the round of 16.

Here’s the top scorers ranking after the first leg of the play-offs:

1- Kylian Mbappé (Real Madrid): 13 goals

2- Anthony Gordon (Newcastle United): 10

3- Harry Kane (FC Bayern München): 8

4- Erling Haaland (Manchester City): 7

5- Victor Osimhen (Galatasaray): 6

- Gabriel Martinelli (Arsenal): 6

7- Vitinha (Paris Saint-Germain): 5

- Jens Petter Hauge (Bodø/Glimt): 5

- Harvey Barnes (Newcastle United): 5

- Marcus Rashford (Barcelona): 5

- Julián Alvarez (Atlético Madrid): 5

- Gorka Guruzeta (Athletic Club): 5

- Fermín López (Barcelona): 5

- Folarin Balogun (AS Monaco): 5

Richardson joins Yorkshire for red-ball campaign

Jhye Richardson appeals during a Sheffield Shield match for Western Australia
Jhye Richardson has appeared in four Tests for Australia [Getty Images]

Yorkshire have made a third Australian overseas signing by bringing in bowler Jhye Richardson for the first block of County Championship fixtures in April and May.

The 29-year-old, who has played four Test matches for his country and featured in the recent Ashes, joins Western Australia teammates Sam Whiteman and Andrew 'AJ' Tye at Headingley.

Whiteman will play in all formats for the White Rose county, while Tye has signed a two-year deal for the T20 Blast.

Yorkshire's general manager of cricket Gavin Hamilton told the club website their latest addition is a "huge boost" to their ambitions to improve on last year's first season back in Division One.

"Jhye is a very impressive bowler who has performed exceptionally well, and he will really complement the team for that important first part of the season," said Hamilton.

"His skillsets are ones suited to English conditions, and he can make things happen with that ability to push his speed into the high 80s.

"Getting Jhye is a huge boost for us, and his quality underlines our ambition to build a squad capable of seriously competing in the County Championship."

Host Italy against Russian flag for athletes at Paralympics

The flag on the embassy of the Russian Federation in Berlin. Christoph Soeder/dpa
The flag on the embassy of the Russian Federation in Berlin. Christoph Soeder/dpa

Winter Paralympics host Italy said on Thursday it was opposed to athletes from Russia and Belarus participating under their own flags.

Only a handful of Russian and Belarusian athletes who have proved they do not support the war in Ukraine have been permitted to compete at the current Winter Olympics in Milan/Cortina as neutrals.

But bosses at the Games for disabled athletes which follows in northern Italy from March 6-15 have opted to allow Russian and Belarusian flags and colours.

"The Italian government expresses its absolute rejection of the International Paralympic Committee's decision to allow six Russian and four Belarusian athletes to participate in the Paralympic Games in Milan-Cortina in 2026," Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said in a statement.

Ukraine has already announced that its officials would not attend the opening ceremony in Verona on March 6.

Ukraine has been fighting off a Russian invasion for four years. Belarus has aided Moscow it its war.

The statement by the Italian foreign minister, which was also signed by Sports Minister Andrea Abodi, added: "The ongoing violation of the ceasefire and the Olympic and Paralympic ideals by Russia, supported by Belarus, is incompatible with the participation of their athletes, except as neutral individual athletes."

Genesis Invitational prize money payouts for the $20 million purse

The PGA Tour rolls along as the The Genesis Invitational kicks off this week.

There's $20 million up for grabs with the winner taking home $4 million. There's 72 golfers competing for the winnings this week and hoping to shake up the PGA Tour's money list.

Here's a look at the purse and total prize money for the second PGA Tour signature event of 2026, the Genesis Invitational.

Who won the 2025 Genesis Invitational?

Fans watch on the 18th green during the second round of The Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club on February 16, 2024 in Pacific Palisades, California.

Ludvig Aberg won the 2025 Genesis Invitational

What's the total purse for the 2026 Genesis Invitational?

The total purse for the 2026 Genesis Invitational is $20 million.

How much money does the winner make at the 2026 Genesis Invitational

The winner of the Genesis Invitational receives $4 million, or 20 percent of the total purse.

The field size is 72 players.

Genesis Invitational 2026 prize money payouts

PositionEarnings
1$4,000,000
2$2,200,000
3$1,400,000
4$1,000,000
5$840,000
6$760,000
7$700,000
8$646,000
9$600,000
10$556,000
11$514,000
12$472,000
13$430,000
14$389,000
15$369,000
16$349,000
17$329,000
18$309,000
19$289,000
20$269,000
21$250,000
22$233,000
23$216,000
24$200,000
25$184,000
26$168,000
27$161,000
28$154,000
29$147,000
30$140,000
31$133,000
32$126,000
33$119,000
34$114,000
35$109,000
36$104,000
37$99,000
38$94,000
39$90,000
40$86,000
41$82,000
42$78,000
43$74,000
44$70,000
45$66,000
46$62,000
47$58,000
48$56,000
49$54,000
50$52,000
51$51,000
52$50,000
53$49,000
54$48,000
55$47,000
56$46,000
57$45,000
58$44,000
59$43,000
60$42,000
61$41,000
62$40,000
63$39,000
64$38,000
65$37,000
66$36,000
67$35,000
68$34,000
69$33,000
70$32,000
71$31,000
72$30,000

This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: Genesis Invitational 2026: Prize money payouts for all positions

Isaiah Stewart suspension, Jalen Duren suspension for Detroit Pistons

Detroit Pistons forward Isaiah Stewart's role in the Pistons' fight with Charlotte Hornets players on Feb. 9 brought a seven-game suspension from the NBA two days later.

All four players tossed for a series of fights in the third quarter at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina were eventually suspended by the NBA. Stewart received the worst punishment – seven games, a ban that started on Feb. 12 in the Pistons' final game before All-Star Weekend. He has six games remaining, meaning he'll miss the Pistons' return to play against the Knicks in New York on Thursday, Feb. 19 (7:30 p.m., Prime Video).

Fellow Pistons big Jalen Duren received a two-game ban for his role in the fights, which began with a dustup with Charlotte's Moussa Diabate – a high-school rival of Duren's in Florida. Duren also served the first game of his suspension before the All-Star break; after tonight's game, he'll be eligible to return on Saturday against the Bulls.

Moussa Diabaté LOST it 😳
Swung on Jalen Duren after the face shove bodies flying, whistles screaming, 4 EJECTIONS.
Pure chaos. Pure hoops. pic.twitter.com/OKWeI1SI5V

— Artoftheleague 🖌️ (@artoftheleague) February 10, 2026

Diabate, a Michigan alumnus, received a four-game suspension, as did Miles Bridges, a Michigan State alumnus, for attempting to punch both Duren and Stewart.

Isaiah Stewart suspension history

The suspension of Stewart – a first-round pick out of the University of Washington in 2020 (at No. 16 overall) – was his fifth over his six seasons:

February 2026: Hornets – 7 games

Stewart left the Pistons' bench to join the fracas when Duren was threatened by Bridges with 7:09 remaining in the quarter and the Pistons leading by eight. He didn't land a punch on Bridges, but leaving the bench carries heavy penalties in the NBA. He can return on March 3, when the Pistons visit the Cleveland Cavaliers.

March 2025: Timberwolves – 2 games

The sixth-year forward was involved in an on-court brawl in March 2025, along with Ron Holland and Marcus Sasser, against the Timberwolves in Minnesota. Holland and Sasser were suspended for a game, while Stewart received a two-game ban from the league.

January 2025: Pacers – 1 game

That followed a one-game suspension in January 2025, in which Stewart was whistled for a flagrant-2 foul early in the second quarter, after a hard shove to the chest of Indiana Pacers big Thomas Bryant in an attempt to box out for a defensive rebound, sending Bryant to the floor. Following his ejection, Stewart made gestures toward the crowd at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis and toward the Pacers' end of the floor. Because Stewart was at four Flagrant Foul points, his flagrant-2 triggered an automatic one-game suspension.

February 2024: Suns – 3 games

In February 2024, Stewart was suspended three games for punching Phoenix Suns big Drew Eubanks near the loading docks at Footprint Center in Phoenix, hours before the Pistons suffered a blowout loss. According to Phoenix police, the two players were engaged in an argument before Stewart delivered the punch, and were then separated by security. Stewart was arrested, issued a citation and released. Eubanks said before the game the two were chest-to-chest before Stewart struck. The charges against Stewart were later dismissed.

November 2021: Lakers – 2 games

Stewart was also involved in a tussle against the LA Lakers in November 2021 that brought an ejection at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. In that game, LA's LeBron James struck Stewart in the face while battling for a rebound and drew blood. Stewart had to be restrained following his ejection and received a two-game suspension.

Does Isaiah Stewart get paid while suspended?

No, Isaiah Stewart will not be paid during his seven-game suspension by the NBA. Players suspended for 19 games or less are docked 1/145th of their salaries per game, per the NBA's collective bargaining agreement. (Suspensions of 20 games or more carry a penalty of 1/110th of a salary, per game.)

How much will Isaiah Stewart lose while suspended?

Isaiah Stewart signed a four-year, $60 million contact extension that began with the 2024-25 season; he is in the second season of the deal that runs through the 2027-28 season, with an annual salary of $15 million.

At 1/145th of his salary per game ($103,448, 28), Stewart will lose $724,137.93 over the length of his seven-game suspension.

Does Jalen Duren get paid while suspended?

Moussa Diabate of the Charlotte Hornets fights Jalen Duren of the Detroit Pistons during the second half at Spectrum Center on Feb. 9, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina.

No, Jalen Duren will not be paid during his two-game suspension by the NBA. Players suspended for 19 games or less are docked 1/145th of their salaries per game, per the NBA's collective bargaining agreement. (Suspensions of 20 games or more carry a penalty of 1/110th of a salary, per game.)

How much will Jalen Duren lose while suspended?

Jalen Duren is playing on the fourth year of his rookie contract, worth $19,474,944; this season, he is making $6,483,144 for the season.

At 1/145th of his salary per game ($44,711.34), Duren will lose $89,422.68 over the length of his two-game suspension.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Isaiah Stewart suspension, Jalen Duren suspension for Detroit Pistons

Isaiah Stewart suspension, Jalen Duren suspension for Detroit Pistons

Detroit Pistons forward Isaiah Stewart's role in the Pistons' fight with Charlotte Hornets players on Feb. 9 brought a seven-game suspension from the NBA two days later.

All four players tossed for a series of fights in the third quarter at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina were eventually suspended by the NBA. Stewart received the worst punishment – seven games, a ban that started on Feb. 12 in the Pistons' final game before All-Star Weekend. He has six games remaining, meaning he'll miss the Pistons' return to play against the Knicks in New York on Thursday, Feb. 19 (7:30 p.m., Prime Video).

Fellow Pistons big Jalen Duren received a two-game ban for his role in the fights, which began with a dustup with Charlotte's Moussa Diabate – a high-school rival of Duren's in Florida. Duren also served the first game of his suspension before the All-Star break; after tonight's game, he'll be eligible to return on Saturday against the Bulls.

Moussa Diabaté LOST it 😳
Swung on Jalen Duren after the face shove bodies flying, whistles screaming, 4 EJECTIONS.
Pure chaos. Pure hoops. pic.twitter.com/OKWeI1SI5V

— Artoftheleague 🖌️ (@artoftheleague) February 10, 2026

Diabate, a Michigan alumnus, received a four-game suspension, as did Miles Bridges, a Michigan State alumnus, for attempting to punch both Duren and Stewart.

Isaiah Stewart suspension history

The suspension of Stewart – a first-round pick out of the University of Washington in 2020 (at No. 16 overall) – was his fifth over his six seasons:

February 2026: Hornets – 7 games

Stewart left the Pistons' bench to join the fracas when Duren was threatened by Bridges with 7:09 remaining in the quarter and the Pistons leading by eight. He didn't land a punch on Bridges, but leaving the bench carries heavy penalties in the NBA. He can return on March 3, when the Pistons visit the Cleveland Cavaliers.

March 2025: Timberwolves – 2 games

The sixth-year forward was involved in an on-court brawl in March 2025, along with Ron Holland and Marcus Sasser, against the Timberwolves in Minnesota. Holland and Sasser were suspended for a game, while Stewart received a two-game ban from the league.

January 2025: Pacers – 1 game

That followed a one-game suspension in January 2025, in which Stewart was whistled for a flagrant-2 foul early in the second quarter, after a hard shove to the chest of Indiana Pacers big Thomas Bryant in an attempt to box out for a defensive rebound, sending Bryant to the floor. Following his ejection, Stewart made gestures toward the crowd at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis and toward the Pacers' end of the floor. Because Stewart was at four Flagrant Foul points, his flagrant-2 triggered an automatic one-game suspension.

February 2024: Suns – 3 games

In February 2024, Stewart was suspended three games for punching Phoenix Suns big Drew Eubanks near the loading docks at Footprint Center in Phoenix, hours before the Pistons suffered a blowout loss. According to Phoenix police, the two players were engaged in an argument before Stewart delivered the punch, and were then separated by security. Stewart was arrested, issued a citation and released. Eubanks said before the game the two were chest-to-chest before Stewart struck. The charges against Stewart were later dismissed.

November 2021: Lakers – 2 games

Stewart was also involved in a tussle against the LA Lakers in November 2021 that brought an ejection at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit. In that game, LA's LeBron James struck Stewart in the face while battling for a rebound and drew blood. Stewart had to be restrained following his ejection and received a two-game suspension.

Does Isaiah Stewart get paid while suspended?

No, Isaiah Stewart will not be paid during his seven-game suspension by the NBA. Players suspended for 19 games or less are docked 1/145th of their salaries per game, per the NBA's collective bargaining agreement. (Suspensions of 20 games or more carry a penalty of 1/110th of a salary, per game.)

How much will Isaiah Stewart lose while suspended?

Isaiah Stewart signed a four-year, $60 million contact extension that began with the 2024-25 season; he is in the second season of the deal that runs through the 2027-28 season, with an annual salary of $15 million.

At 1/145th of his salary per game ($103,448, 28), Stewart will lose $724,137.93 over the length of his seven-game suspension.

Does Jalen Duren get paid while suspended?

Moussa Diabate of the Charlotte Hornets fights Jalen Duren of the Detroit Pistons during the second half at Spectrum Center on Feb. 9, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina.

No, Jalen Duren will not be paid during his two-game suspension by the NBA. Players suspended for 19 games or less are docked 1/145th of their salaries per game, per the NBA's collective bargaining agreement. (Suspensions of 20 games or more carry a penalty of 1/110th of a salary, per game.)

How much will Jalen Duren lose while suspended?

Jalen Duren is playing on the fourth year of his rookie contract, worth $19,474,944; this season, he is making $6,483,144 for the season.

At 1/145th of his salary per game ($44,711.34), Duren will lose $89,422.68 over the length of his two-game suspension.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Isaiah Stewart suspension, Jalen Duren suspension for Detroit Pistons

Report: Man United are already regretting £26m transfer deal

Report: Man United are already regretting £26m transfer deal
Report: Man United are already regretting £26m transfer deal

Man Utd transfer latest: Rashford valuation sparks frustration

Manchester United’s transfer strategy is again under scrutiny, with fresh details emerging from the Daily Star regarding Marcus Rashford’s situation in Spain. The report claims United chiefs are regretting their decision to agree to sell Marcus Rashford to Barcelona for a mere £26m.

Since his loan move to Barcelona last summer, Rashford has managed to rejuvenate his previously faltering career. Ten goals in 35 appearances have altered perceptions, as has his reinstatement in Thomas Tuchel’s England squad. United now estimate Rashford’s worth to be closer to £50m, and they are aware that several other clubs are eyeing him up for a summer transfer.

Photo IMAGO

Loan terms create dilemma for hierarchy

The complication lies in the structure of the agreement. When the loan was sanctioned, United gave Barca the first option to sign him for no more than £26m. It is believed that some high ranking individuals at United are frustrated by the terms of the deal and would prefer the winger went elsewhere.

That frustration is understandable. Market values shift quickly, particularly when form improves and international recognition follows. Rashford’s profile has risen again, and £26m now feels like a figure from a different economic cycle.

Yet there is little room for manoeuvre. With Rashford eager to make his Camp Nou stay permanent, Barca might try to capitalise on this by pushing for an even lower price for the striker. United’s leverage appears limited, especially as there is no recall clause in the loan contract, meaning a return to Old Trafford is not possible, even if all parties were in favour.

Barcelona stance and contract reality

Sir Jim Ratcliffe remains keen to remove Rashford from the club’s payroll. His £15m a year contract runs until 2028, a significant commitment in a squad recalibration. However, Ratcliffe is not thrilled about the idea of letting Barca secure the 28 year old’s services on the cheap.

Interestingly, despite being one of United’s top earners, Rashford only ranks as the sixth highest paid player in the Barcelona squad. Barcelona manager Hansi Flick is reportedly eager to retain Rashford for the long haul, a view reinforced by the player’s own actions. He has purchased a lavish flat in Espluges, boasting views of the Collserola mountains, and is said to be relishing life in Catalonia.

Photo IMAGO

Rumours suggest interim manager Michael Carrick would welcome Rashford back at United. That possibility, though, appears theoretical. Rashford has confided to those close to him that he has no plans to return to his boyhood club, having made the tough choice to pursue his career elsewhere.

With Rashford expected to be named in Tuchel’s final squad for this summer’s World Cup in North America, the optics for United are uncomfortable. A rejuvenated forward thriving abroad while his former club debates valuation inevitably raises questions about timing and judgement.

Our View – EPL Index Analysis

This feels like another chapter in a pattern of reactive decision making. Rashford’s form dipped, confidence waned and the solution was a quick exit with a low ceiling fee. Now that he is scoring again and back in the England picture, the club appears to have undersold an academy graduate entering his prime years.

The frustration is not about sentimentality. It is about strategy. If the valuation truly sits around £50m now, why was a £26m option agreed without safeguards? In a market where proven Premier League attackers command significant fees, that clause looks light.

There is also the symbolic weight. Rashford is not an ordinary squad player, he represents continuity from academy to first team. Seeing him flourish under Hansi Flick while United rebuild again under shifting leadership stings.

Supporters will argue that financial discipline matters, especially with wages of £15m a year. But discipline must align with foresight. Allowing Barcelona first refusal at such a figure reduces negotiating power at a time when United need every advantage.

If he departs permanently for £26m, it will be viewed by many fans as a missed opportunity, both sporting and commercial.

T20 World Cup: Shivam Dube’s explosive 66, Varun Chakravarthy’s 3/14 headline India’s 17-run win over Netherlands

AHMEDABAD: Abhishek Sharma was out for his third consecutive duck but showing yet again how dangerous and impactful he can be, Shivam Dube struck a career-best 66 off just 31 balls to star in India’s 17-run win over the Netherlands here on Wednesday.

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The defending champions and co-hosts rounded off the league stage by winning all their four matches and topping Group A. They now take a well-earned breather for the next three days before they take on South Africa at the same venue in their first Super 8s match.



With an aim to help the bowlers get used to defending a total in dewy conditions in the Super 8s, India decided to bat first in the inconsequential tie. Dube’s power-packed half-century — his first in T20 World Cups — lifted India to a daunting 193-6 after they struggled initially against Dutch spinner Aryan Dutt, who bowled brilliantly to finish with 2-19 in four overs.

Varun Chakravarthy then spun some of his own magic, taking 3-14 in three overs, but a spirited Dutch team did well to respond with 176-7.

India dropped a few catches on the night but the biggest worry would be the terrible run of Abhishek, who fell for his fifth duck of the year. Ishan Kishan (18; 7b, 22x4, 1x6), Tilak Varma (31; 27b, 3x4, 1x6) and skipper Suryakumar Yadav (34; 28b, 2x4, 1x6) were all dismissed when well set.

When ‘SKY’ was caught at fine leg off Logan van Beek (3-56 in four overs), India were literally crawling at 110/4 in the 14th over. However, all-rounders Hardik Pandya (30; 21b, 3x6) and Dube then put on 76 in just 35 balls for the fifth wicket to give the tournament co-hosts some much needed momentum in the second half of the innings.

With Dube, who reached his fifty off 25 balls, and Pandya tonking nine sixes between them, India plundered 75 in the last five overs, giving plenty of entertainment to the 68,000-strong crowd.

In the penultimate over, the Dube-Pandya pair took 21 off Kyle Klein as Pandya smoked the medium-pacer for two sixes and Dube took a four off him.

Overall, India’s batters struck 13 sixes on the night. Dube, who employs his long levers, timing and raw power to send the ball into orbit if pitched in his arc, had also produced cameos of 23 (16b) and 27 (17 balls) against Namibia and Pakistan in his previous two outings.

Abhishek, meanwhile, lost his leg stump off the third delivery that he faced as Aryan Dutt, bowling brilliantly, had one skidding off the surface. Short of confidence, Abhishek missed the line of the ball completely as tried to heave it on the on side. Delivering a fabulous spell in the Powerplay, Dutt also had Ishan Kishan bowled in a freakish way: the ball brushed off the in-form left-hander’s pads and elbow before trickling on to the stumps even as he tried to stop it.

The Netherlands deserve to be complimented for the way they kept India, who were 51/2 after the Powerplay, in check in the first 15 overs before the Dube-Pandya onslaught.

12 - India have extended their record in T20 World Cup with their twelfth triumph in succession between June 5, 2024 and Feb 18, 2026.

66 - Shivam Dube has recorded his maiden fifty in the T20 World Cup, bettering the 34 vs Bangladesh in North Sound on June 22, 2024. His knock is his career-best in T20Is. His previous best was 65 vs New Zealand in Vizag on Jan 28, 2026.

1 - Dube’s knock is an Indian record for the highest individual innings by a No. 5 batter or below in the T20 World Cup, bettering Hardik Pandya’s 63 vs England in Adelaide on Nov 10, 2022.

13 - Hardik Pandya has become the 13th all-rounder and the first Indian to complete the double of 6000+ runs and 200+ wickets in Twenty20.

3 - Abhishek Sharma is the third opening batter to get three ducks in a T20 WC tournament. The first two are West Indies’ Andrew Fletcher in 2009 and Bangladesh’s Tanzid Hasan in 2024. Three other batters have recorded three ducks in a T20 WC competition — Scotland’s Richie Berrington in 2021-22, Zimbabwe’s Regis Chakabva in 2022-23 and Uganda’s Roger Mukasa in 2024.

4 - Abhishek is the fourth batter to register three successive ducks in the T20 World Cup, the first three being India’s Ashish Nehra between 2010 and 2016, Fletcher in 2009 and Mukasa in 2024.

55 - Abhishek is the second Indian batter to get 5 ducks in 8 innings in a calendar year. Sanju Samson had registered five ducks in 12 innings in 2024.

Premier League move on the cards for Alexander Nübel?

Premier League move on the cards for Alexander Nübel?
Premier League move on the cards for Alexander Nübel?

Currently on loan at VfB Stuttgart from FC Bayern Munich until the end of the season, Alexander Nübel's future is uncertain.

If Manuel Neuer decides to retire at the end of the season, the 29-year-old could return to Munich to compete with Jonas Urbig for the starting spot at FC Bayern.

However, if Neuer opts to extend his contract by another year, Nübel will likely pursue a new move – either on loan or permanently.

Having relied on Nübel on loan for the past three seasons, Stuttgart have a potential successor lined up: Dennis Seimen, who is currently on loan at SC Paderborn.

This makes a move elsewhere more likely for Nübel, with the English Premier League among his preferred destinations, according to Abendzeitung.

So far, however, there has been no concrete interest from clubs in England.

PGA Tour money lead held by four pros, changes hands for fifth week in a row

For the fifth PGA Tour event in a row since the start of the 2026 season, the top of the money list has changed hands. 

And four players held that spot during the span. 

With another Signature Event coming up this week with the Genesis Invitational, at the Riviera Country Club in Pacific Palisades, Calif. It's a safe bet to happen again. 

Collin Morikawa is greeted by his wife Katherine Zhu on Feb. 15 after he won the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

When Collin Morikawa won the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am on Feb. 15, his third start of the season, the $3.6 million first-place check vaulted him to the top, after he was 130th the week before, tying for 54th at the WM Phoenix Open. 

Morikawa passed the three players who previously were atop the money list, Chris Gotterup (now No. 2), Scottie Scheffler (No. 3) and Ryan Gerard (No. 7) and has $3,622,272 in the bank. 

But the same amount of cash is up for grabs at Riviera, $20 million. Since the field is 72 players, as opposed to 80 at Pebble Beach, the first-place check is up to $4 million. 

More money at stake in coming weeks 

The next Signature Event is March 5-8 at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, with a $20 million purse. The following week will be The Players Championship March 12-15, with a $25 million purse. After PGA Tour stops in Palm Harbor, Houston and San Antonio, the Masters (which offered $21 million last year) and the RBC Heritage (a Signature Event worth $20 million) are back-to-back weeks. 

That means over a 10-week period beginning at Pebble Beach and ending at Harbour Town Golf Links on Hilton Head Island, S.C., six tournaments will offer at least $126 million, with $23.9 million available to the winners. 

Who’s in the Millionaire’s Club? 

There are now 14 players who have earned $1 million on more in PGA Tour events, up from seven last week. Added to the list are Morikawa, Sepp Straka and Min Woo Lee (who tied for 2nd at Pebble Beach), Ryo Hisatusune, Jake Knapp and Jacob Bridgeman (who all tied for 8th at Pebble Beach) and Akshay Bhatia (tie for 6th). 

PGA Tour money leaders 

Through AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am 

  • 1. Collin Morikawa $3,622,272 
  • 2. Chris Gotterup $3,576,375 
  • 3. Scottie Scheffler $2,973,180 
  • 4. Hideki Matsuyama $1,917,470 
  • 5. Sepp Straka $1,882,720 
  • 6. Min Woo Lee $1,862,048 
  • 7. Ryan Gerard $1,858,328 
  • 8. Justin Rose $1,806,375 
  • 9. Si Woo Kim $1,765,755 
  • 10. Ryo Hisatsune $1,509,176 
  • 11. Jake Knapp $1,406,475 
  • 12. Pierceson Coody $1,298,698 
  • 13. Jacob Bridgeman $1,216,960 
  • 14. Akshay Bhatia $1,129,680 
  • 15. Tommy Fleetwood $877,500 
  • 16. Jason Day $820,160 
  • 17. Matt McCarty $804,413 
  • 18. Patrick Rodgers $791,108 
  • 19. Sahith Theegala $763,168 
  • 20. Sam Burns $747,918 
  • 21. Maverick McNealy $647,275 
  • 22. Tom Hoge $644,364 
  • 23. Matt Fitzpatrick $643,238 
  • 24. Andrew Putnam $616,400 
  • 25. Michael Thorbjornsen $603,930 
  • 26. Russell Henley $597,539 
  • 27. Nicolai Højgaard $532,320 
  • 28. Harry Hall $530,525 
  • 29. Robert MacIntyre $526,975 
  • 30. Sam Stevens $516,978 

This article originally appeared on Florida Times-Union: Collin Morikawa's victory at Pebble Beach puts him atop PGA Tour money list

Arsenal face ‘bottle job’ questions after implosion against Wolves, says club legend

Arsenal couldn't hold on to their two-goal lead at Wolves (Jacob King/PA Wire)

Arsenal should be braced for accusations they are “bottle jobs” in the wake of a disappointing 2-2 draw at Wolves.

The Gunners were two goals in front after strikes from Bukayo Saka and Piero Hincapie, but Hugo Bueno pulled one back for the hosts before debutant Tom Edozie scored a last-gasp equaliser.

Arsenal are now five points clear of Manchester City at the top of the Premier League, but Pep Guardiola’s side have a game in hand.

Speaking on Sky Sports, former Arsenal midfielder Paul Merson said the mentality of Mikel Arteta’s side is going to come in for intense scrutiny in the season run-in.

“You can’t play in second gear. When it went 2-2, for the last three minutes there was an urgency, they didn’t have that [before Wolves’ equaliser]. You can’t play like that. Every game is a cup final until the end.

“You’ve got to play at a high tempo. If Arsenal play at a high tempo, Wolves can’t live with them. But to play the way they played, and it’s slow and lazy, and they are giving the ball away, then Wolves are always going to be in the game.

“That could come back to bite them. That is really, really disappointing tonight. It [criticism] is going come on full blast now – being ‘bottle jobs’, ‘melting’. It's full-on now.”

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta was critical of his side’s performance.

Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta says his side have only themselves to blame (Jacob King/PA) (PA Wire)
Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta says his side have only themselves to blame (Jacob King/PA) (PA Wire)

“Extremely disappointed with the result and the way the game ended, but we have to blame ourselves,” he said. “In the second half we didn’t show anything close to the standards required in this league to win.

“It was one moment after another. Even though we scored the second goal, we never had control of the game — that’s the reality.”

Arsenal have now won only three of their last eight Premier League matches.

“Disappointed. Not much else to say,” Saka said. “There was a big difference between our first half and second half performances. We dropped our standards and were punished for it.

“It’s time to focus on ourselves, raise our standards and improve our performances. It’s in our control.”

Arteta said his team have to accept every criticism that comes their way and need to bounce back against Tottenham on Sunday.

He added: “That’s credit obviously to Wolves, they can’t be underestimated. It’s very basic things and simple things that today we did really wrong and that’s why we had the feeling without conceding much, when the game is open that kind of thing can happen.

“Any question, criticism, opinion, you have to take it on the chin today. That’s it. Any bullet, take it because we didn’t perform at the level required, Anything anybody says can be right because we didn’t do what we had to do. The way to do it is on the pitch on Sunday in another great opportunity we have.

“We have always done it but if you are strong you need to show it next time. To say it here is simple but we have to show it on the pitch.”

Wolves boss Rob Edwards saw his side pick up a second successive draw and was proud of the belief his side showed to gain an unlikely point.

“It’s nice to get a late equaliser and especially when you’re 2-0 down against a team like that. We’re up against Arsenal, everyone needs to have a bit of perspective. In the first 20-30 mins it was everything we expected the game to be like.

“We stayed in the game and that was important. We showed belief and played with a bit more emotion. To show that character and quality and all of that. It might be easier for the lads to lose belief but that’s not the case.”

Transfer: Cyrille Bayala moves to China

Transfer: Cyrille Bayala moves to China
Transfer: Cyrille Bayala moves to China

Burkinabé international joins on a free transfer

Transfer: Cyrille Bayala moves to China

Dalian Con City, one of the clubs in China’s second division, has announced the signing of Burkinabé international Cyrille Barros Bayala.

After a period of free agency following the end of his contract, Cyrille Bayala is back in the spotlight, this time in China. The Burkinabé winger embarks on a new adventure in Chinese football. The former RC Lens player joins Dalian Con City on a free transfer, looking to continue his professional career with the Chinese second-tier side.

Cyrille Bayala is 29 years old and brings with him a wealth of European experience gained at clubs such as RC Lens, Sochaux, Ajaccio, and Sheriff Tiraspol. Since 2013, Bayala has made 47 appearances for the Burkina Faso national team.

Liverpool should consider £120m double transfer raid – Opinion

Liverpool should consider £120m double transfer raid – Opinion
Liverpool should consider £120m double transfer raid – Opinion

The Brazilian Bull Built for a New Era

Some defenders fill a shirt, while others define a system. Murillo feels like the latter.

Liverpool’s reported interest in Nottingham Forest’s left-footed powerhouse is not random speculation. It feels strategic. At 23, the Brazilian has already established himself as one of the Premier League’s most physically dominant centre-backs — aggressive in the duel, fearless in recovery, and surprisingly composed in possession. If Forest falter financially or flirt with relegation, opportunities will emerge. And Liverpool should be ready.

What makes Murillo so intriguing is not merely his strength or aerial presence. It is his profile. Left-footed central defenders are tactical currency in the modern game. In a back three — particularly the one many anticipate Xabi Alonso would implement — balance is everything. The left centre-back must be capable of stepping into midfield channels, covering wide spaces, and initiating build-up under pressure.

Murillo does all three.

He carries the ball with authority, punches progressive passes into midfield, and relishes one-versus-one defensive scenarios. There is a rawness to his game, yes, but there is also controlled aggression — the kind that can be moulded within an elite structure.

Liverpool have been linked with Nico Schlotterbeck, Piero Hincapié, Alessandro Bastoni and even Micky van de Ven in various windows. All fine profiles. All capable. But Murillo feels different and logical. He feels Premier League-hardened already. No adaptation curve or fear of integration. No bedding-in narrative that sees him struggling to command a starting role. Just plug him into the left channel of a three and let him impose himself.

If Alonso is indeed the long-term vision, then defensive recruitment must reflect that identity. Murillo fits the blueprint almost perfectly.

Pairing Power with Power: The Elliott Anderson Factor

Yet systems are not built on defenders alone. They require ballast in midfield.

If Murillo is the structural piece at the back, Elliott Anderson could be the engine ahead of him.

Liverpool has lacked a genuine midfield powerhouse since Fabinho’s physical peak. Alexis Mac Allister brings intelligence. Dominik Szoboszlai brings drive and creativity. Curtis Jones brings control. But there is an argument that a combative, all-action presence remains missing.

Anderson has that edge.

The Nottingham Forest midfielder covers ground relentlessly, presses with bite, and drives forward with the ball at pace. He is not merely a destroyer; he is progressive. In a potential Alonso system, where transitions must be managed aggressively and wide channels protected, that profile becomes essential.

The idea of investing heavily in one club may sound dramatic — but context matters. Forest’s spending under Evangelos Marinakis has been chaotic at times. Financial pressures could force movement regardless of league status. If Liverpool were to commit significant funds — perhaps in the region of £120m combined — it would not be reckless. It would be targeted.

Murillo shores up the defensive spine. Anderson reinforces the midfield core. Together, they inject power, athleticism and future-proofing into a squad that increasingly requires structural evolution.

As for Arne Slot, recent improvements may not be enough to silence long-term uncertainty. If change is coming, recruitment must align with that direction rather than react to short-term form.

The Brazilian bull at centre-back. The relentless engine in midfield.

If Liverpool are serious about building a side capable of adapting to a new era — and potentially a new manager — then a calculated raid on Nottingham Forest might not be opportunistic. It might be essential.

Time to get control of court storming before something ugly happens

Hey look, everyone. We’re hand-wringing again!

Those mean coaches and players, fresh off a high-intensity game where their very financial livelihood is dependent, are bullying the poor, misunderstood clowns from the stands just trying to post their latest TikTok and chase social cred, that’s all.

Or as we like to say in these most wonderful United States, storming the (insert your playing surface).

Here’s what I call it: a world of no rules. 

Not to mention reckless, dangerous and a false sense of security.

Yet with all of that, and even after another dolt from the stands shoved a phone in the face of Nebraska coach Fred Hoiberg seconds after a loss to rival Iowa, and screamed at him; even after Hoiberg tried to knock the phone from said dolt, missed and his swing connected with an Iowa staffer in the handshake line, we refuse to end this nonsense with clear and unambiguous rules. 

Save the cash: Kansas State is embarrassing itself not to protect basketball, but help football

Bracketology: Who is rising in latest March Madness predictions

If you storm the court (or field) before players and officials have exited, you’ll be arrested and lose ticket privileges forever. Period.

pic.twitter.com/kIxSZtqLuL

— Certified Ball Knower 🇺🇸 (@CrtfdBallKnower) February 18, 2026

Instead, university presidents have decided to fine each other. The ACC fined North Carolina $50,000 earlier this month when its fans stormed the court after beating rival Duke, and the Big Ten will no doubt fine Iowa for its latest breach of rules. 

The same North Carolina that is currently fueling its football NIL to the tune of $20 million. That 50K might be a bridge too far, baby.

But as the NCAA (also, collection of university presidents) has shown decade after decade, having rules and enforcing them are two distinctly different things.

This isn’t a matter of want, it’s a mater of will. 

Know why the NFL doesn’t have problems with field storming? Because the most successful sport in the history of the planet doesn’t put up with it.

There’s a police presence, and there are rules. There’s no gray area about what happens when you enter the field of play at an NFL stadium. 

You’ll spend the next few hours in the local lockup, for starters. And just might get a shoulder pad to the solar plexus by one of 100-plus players on the field before the cops toss you in the back of a wagon.

College sports has decided to fine the universities, not the actual perpetrators. College sports has decided to fine each other, and move more fungible money between schools within the conference, instead of targeting the offenders. 

I’m shocked, absolutely shocked, something much worse hasn’t happened on one of the many court and field stormings. Because the law of averages says it will, and when it does, college sports will do what it does best. 

Feign disbelief, and reactively make sweeping changes at the horror of it all. 

Here’s a novel idea: Try proactive steps to eliminate the problem. Not a dopey fine, or an announcement over the PA system. 

This isn’t about the “tradition” of storming the field, or running on the court at a buzzer-beater. This is a few hundred students on the field with phones lifted high, recording for prosperity. 

Or Instagram. Whichever comes first. 

This isn’t about eliminating what makes college sports special, or the purity of college sports over homogenized professional sports. No one is taking away your precious look-at-me moment. 

Just making you wait three minutes so players and officials can exit the joint. Hell, we’ll throw a countdown clock with a horn into the equation, so everyone can run on the field or floor and get stupid at the same time. 

TikTok to your heart’s content, everybody. 

Or we can keep doing dumb, and the next incident won’t be so simple and eventually forgettable.

The next incident might be much closer to what happened three years ago, when Alabama wideout Jermaine Burton took a swing at a coed who ran by and yelled something at him after Tennessee beat the Tide in overtime. 

Some player or coach somewhere will directly connect at some point, and when the clown holding the phone hits the deck and is seriously injured, we’ll scream and yell about it for weeks, post about it on social media and demand change. 

When we knew the answer all along. 

There are rules, and there are consequences for those who don’t follow rules. Despite what you may have heard, that’s not a foreign concept.

Coaches ask players to compete like a pack of wild dogs on the court and field, expending every ounce of energy like you’re livelihood depended on it. Because now, in the new era of NIL, it does.

But don’t mind clowns with their phones, picking at the fresh wound during your lowest moment of the week or year. 

They’re just kids, and it’s tradition.

There are no rules. 

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College basketball court stormings don't need to stop, just wait a minute

Commanders' Marshon Lattimore named a potential salary cap casualty

The Washington Commanders are one of a handful of teams that have a decent amount of cap space to work with this offseason. The Athletic recently named one player from each team who could be a cap casualty in 2026, and for the Commanders, it's not so much a cap casualty as it is a player who needs to go. Their cap casualty pick for the Commanders, unsurprisingly, was veteran cornerback Marshon Lattimore.

Cap casualty, veteran cut, unsurprising cut — use whatever label you want, but Lattimore’s time with the Commanders is almost certainly done. He has one year left on his deal, but his $16.5 million salary isn’t guaranteed, which means the team can move on and save $18.5 million in cap space. It’s a layup, and frankly it’s necessary for the defense to improve. But the failed experiment was costly. Washington gave up essentially three draft picks (the Commanders also swapped fifth-rounders) to acquire Lattimore from the New Orleans Saints at the 2024 trading deadline. The Commanders’ attempt to rebuild, at the time, seemed to be on a faster track than anticipated. But Lattimore was often more of a liability than an asset to Washington’s secondary, and the team proved last season that it’s clearly far from contending anytime soon.

Lattimore joined the Commanders in the middle of the 2024 season when general manager Adam Peters traded away multiple Commanders' draft picks to bring the veteran to Washington. The secondary needed some help, and it still does because Lattimore hasn't panned out as expected. He was hampered by a hamstring injury that delayed his Commanders' debut, and only played nine games in 2025 due to a torn ACL.

In all, Lattimore has played in 11 games for the Commanders, recording 31 tackles (19 solo), one tackle for a loss, one fumble recovery, 10 passes defensed, and one interception. On top of his production struggles, Lattimore's off-field issues haven't helped his cause. Even before his recent arrest, Lattimore was unlikely to return in 2026.

This article originally appeared on Commanders Wire: Washington Commanders: Marshon Lattimore named potential cap casualty

'The bottle has been well and truly opened' or 'move on and work'?

Your Arsenal opinions banner
[BBC]

We asked for your views on league leaders Arsenal after they squandered a two-goal lead to draw 2-2 with bottom side Wolves on Wednesday.

Here are some of your comments:

William: Without Martin Odegaard, we lack direction, inventiveness and effort. The sooner Mikel Arteta abandons his backwards, sideways technique and accepts that creativity has a role, the better.

Philip: Pathetic! Despite the depth of the squad and the versatility on offer, the team lacked imagination, drive and determination. If the club thinks a result is based on 20 minutes then this showed their naivety. The bottle has been well and truly opened and Manchester City are drinking from it. We were Tottenham in disguise!

Tai: Arsenal are trying to win and we support them even in difficult times like. Winning games will not be handed to Arsenal by any teams, so let's move on and work towards the goal at hand. One game at a time. I believe in our team and support them. Come on, Gunners, you got this!

Colin: Arsenal scored early and Wolves were all over the place. Looked like a bottom-of-the-table side. A routine Arsenal win looked odds-on but Arsenal still played in second gear, as if 1-0 was enough. Massive chance squandered.

Mark: Cruising at 2-0, then imploded. Soft centre allowing Wolves to rough us up. Bukayo Saka should have played on the wing, as Noni Madueka was non existent. Calamitous goal to concede at the end. Arsenal don't make it easy for themselves.

Doug: We need to remove the rose-tinted glasses. Manchester City are ruthless - a quality Arsenal just don't possess. So sad to see another title opportunity disappear like all the others. We've flattered to deceive for much of this season.

Darren: Absolutely bored out of my mind watching Arsenal. They break into great positions, then stop, hold it up, giving the other team time to get back into position - then we pass around and back to start again. Said it from the start, we WON'T win the league playing like this. Arteta needs to fix THAT.

Steve: Yet another very disappointing result. I can't see us winning the league playing like this. Pushing the ball from one side of the pitch to the other with no urgency whatsoever. I'm a Gooner and I must admit it's very boring to watch.

The Premier League table after Wednesday's result, showing Arsenal top by five points but with second-placed Man City having a game in hand
[BBC]

Conference League: Jagiellonia vs. Fiorentina – probable line-ups, where to watch on TV

Conference League: Jagiellonia vs. Fiorentina – probable line-ups, where to watch on TV
Conference League: Jagiellonia vs. Fiorentina – probable line-ups, where to watch on TV

Moise Kean, David De Gea and Dodo are not even available as Fiorentina coach Paolo Vanoli will rotate his squad for the first leg of the Conference League knockout play-off against Jagiellonia.

It kicks off at 21:00 CET (20:00 GMT) at the Stadion Miejski in Białystok, Poland, right after Brann-Bologna in the Europa League.

Fiorentina coach Vanoli has left many of the Viola stars at home as the Tuscans have an important Serie A match against Pisa next Monday.

FLORENCE, ITALY – JANUARY 11: Head coach Paolo Vanoli manager of ACF Fiorentina reacts during the Serie A match between ACF Fiorentina and AC Milan at Artemio Franchi on January 11, 2026 in Florence, Italy. (Photo by Gabriele Maltinti/Getty Images)

The likes of Kean, Dodo, De Gea and Manor Solomon haven’t even made the trip, while Albert Gudmundsson is injured, and Marco Brescianini and Daniele Rugani are not part of the Tuscans’ UEFA list.

Roberto Piccoli will start in attack, and Jacopo Fazzini is expected to begin as a left winger, according to Sky Sport and other media.

BOLOGNA, ITALY – JANUARY 18: Rolando Mandragora of ACF Fiorentina celebrates after scoring the opening goal during the Serie A match between Bologna FC 1909 and ACF Fiorentina at Renato Dall’Ara Stadium on January 18, 2026 in Bologna, Italy. (Photo by Alessandro Sabattini/Getty Images)

Vanoli has also called up seven Primavera players for this match.

Rolando Mandragora is expected to feature in the Viola XI tonight as he’ll be suspended for the next Serie A fixture against regional rivals Pisa.

Jagiellonia vs. Fiorentina – where to watch on TV

The match will be shown live on TNT Sports 9 in the UK and Ireland and on Paramount+ in the USA. Football Italia will provide live updates via a liveblog.

Jagiellonia vs. Fiorentina – probable line-ups

Jagiellonia (4-3-3): Abramowicz; Wojtuszek, Vital, Pelmard, Wdowik; Flach, Mazurek, Pozo; Jóźwiak, Baždar, Imaz.

Fiorentina (4-3-3): Lezzerini; Fortini, Comuzzo, Ranieri, Gosens; Ndour, Mandragora, Fabbian; Harrison, Piccoli, Fazzini.

T20 World Cup 2026: Yesterday's match reports, results and highlights

NEW DELHI: The group-stage action at the T20 World Cup 2026 delivered commanding wins, standout individual performances, and decisive results that shaped the Super 8 lineup on Wednesday.

In the morning fixture, South Africa cruised to a comfortable six-wicket win over the United Arab Emirates. Chasing a modest 123, the Proteas wrapped up the chase in just 13.2 overs.



Aiden Markram provided early momentum with a brisk 28 off 11 balls, while Ryan Rickleton smashed 30 off 16 deliveries. Young Dewald Brevis impressed with a fluent 36 off 25 balls, showcasing his power with several towering sixes.

Earlier, UAE struggled against South Africa’s pace attack, with Anrich Nortje (2/28) and Corbin Bosch (3/12) leading the charge as UAE managed 122/6, despite Alishan Sharafu’s 45.

In the second match, Pakistan kept their campaign alive with a dominant 102-run victory over Namibia. Opener Sahibzada Farhan starred with an unbeaten 100 off 58 balls, supported by Salman Agha and Shadab Khan.

Pakistan posted 199/3, and Namibia collapsed for 97, with Usman Tariq (4/16) and Shadab Khan (3/19) sharing seven wickets to seal Pakistan’s spot in the Super 8s.

In the final fixture, India continued their winning streak with a 17-run victory over the Netherlands to top Group A. Shivam Dube’s explosive 66 off 31 balls anchored India’s 193/6, with contributions from Tilak Varma, Suryakumar Yadav, and Hardik Pandya. The Dutch fought hard, led by Bas de Leede’s 33, but Varun Chakravarthy’s 3/14 ensured India sealed their fourth consecutive win.

T20 World Cup 2026 – Yesterday's Results



MatchResultTop Performers
South Africa vs UAESouth Africa won by 6 wicketsDewald Brevis 36, Ryan Rickleton 30 , Corbin Bosch 3/12
Pakistan vs NamibiaPakistan won by 102 runsSahibzada Farhan 100*, Usman Tariq 4/16, Shadab Khan 3/19
India vs NetherlandsIndia won by 17 runsShivam Dube 66, Varun Chakravarthy 3/14

Antonio at the center of a battle for his signature

Antonio at the center of a battle for his signature
Antonio at the center of a battle for his signature

Charlton and Al-Sailiya hot on his trail

Antonio at the center of a battle for his signature

Michail Antonio, 35, is a free agent after his departure from West Ham United and is currently training with Charlton Athletic. The London club is eager to sign him, but Al-Sailiya SC is also pushing hard to secure his services.

During his spell with the Hammers, Antonio featured in 323 matches across all competitions, netting 83 goals and providing 42 assists. Charlton, currently 18th in the Championship, and Al-Sailiya, ninth in the Qatari league, are both hoping the striker will tip the scales in their favor. A final decision is expected in the coming days.

How Kansas City wooed World Cup giants to its base camps: BBQ, padel, ‘KC Kind’

How Kansas City wooed World Cup giants to its base camps: BBQ, padel, ‘KC Kind’When four unassuming Argentines settled in for breakfast at the Hotel Kansas City on Dec. 10, no one — not even their hosts — knew that this, a low-key visit to America’s 38th-largest city, would incite a heavyweight battle for World Cup base camps.

The Argentines — soccer administrators and fitness coaches — were there to tour hotels and facilities. They were searching for a temporary World Cup home, a place where Lionel Messi and the reigning champs could live and train this summer. But they’d just been to Texas; next, they’d go to Miami. Kansas City, a relatively humble town tucked away in Middle America, the smallest of the 2026 World Cup’s metro areas, felt like an afterthought.

“The pervasive rumor for Argentina,” says Alan Dietrich, Kansas City’s base camp lead, “was that they were going to be base-camping in Miami.”

Then, however, the four men squeezed into Dietrich’s compact SUV. And as they hopped around Kansas and Missouri, from Sporting KC’s training center to hotels, pleasantly surprised by the lack of traffic, charmed by Dietrich’s affability, they felt … comfortable. By evening, they were chowing down on famous Kansas City barbecue at Jack Stack. “And they loved it,” Dietrich says.

As they devoured a spread of 10 meats, plus every side and dessert on the menu, they bonded with Dietrich and soccer-loving waiters. The following morning, they found an ideal World Cup hotel — with a coherent layout and space to roam, distant from downtown bustle. They eventually chose Kansas City for its location “and, more importantly, the amenities,” the Argentine soccer federation, AFA, said in a news release.

And, in doing so, they sent England scrambling.

England, throughout 2025, had fallen for Kansas City. Everyone, from executives to head coach Thomas Tuchel, had visited. They found a boutique hotel that felt, in some ways, like an elegant English estate. Over the summer, they negotiated directly with Sporting KC; both parties wanted to lock in a deal for the MLS club’s training ground.

FIFA, however, intervened. It introduced rules that gave preference to highly-ranked teams and, crucially, to those with nearby group-stage games.

When December’s World Cup draw gave Argentina and the Netherlands games in Kansas City, the Argentines, ranked No. 2, had first pick and chose Sporting’s facilities. The Dutch, ranked No. 7, went next and chose the home of the NWSL’s Kansas City Current. England, with matches in Texas, Massachusetts and New Jersey, “felt like they were on the outside looking in,” Sporting KC CEO Jake Reid tells The Athletic.

But they still felt attached to Kansas City. So they returned for another round of tours. And they found a solution.

They called Sporting KC and FIFA, who called Kansas City’s host committee. Pam Kramer, the committee’s CEO, remembers getting the call on Dec. 11 — as Argentina’s visit was concluding. England, she was told, was now eyeing Swope Soccer Village, home of Sporting KC’s reserve team and academy; could the region handle a fourth base camp — with Algeria reportedly set to camp in nearby Lawrence, Kan.? Could it accommodate three top-seven teams?

The answer was “yes.” It almost always has been “yes” in a city that, more so than others, sees the World Cup as a stage on which to perform for the world.

“There is a united, collective belief that this could be transformational for the way people think about Kansas City,” Kramer says, “and for the confidence we have in ourselves.”

That, above all, is why Kansas City will host three top seeds throughout the 2026 World Cup, while no other city will be home base for more than one.

In interviews with a variety of people close to the base camp process, several other reasons also emerged. Teams valued Kansas City’s central location. They liked its modern facilities. They saw its summer heat as a tool to help them acclimatize. They loved the potential for privacy and the ease of moving around.

In the end, though, they were wooed by Midwestern hospitality, by proverbial “red carpets,” and by a proud region determined to shine in World Cup spotlights — to elevate itself onto a pedestal where other host cities already sit.

“This is the biggest thing we’re ever going to host,” Jenny Wilson, the VP of tourism development for Visit KC and one of the many who welcomed Argentina’s delegation, tells The Athletic. “L.A. has the Olympics, New York hosts massive things all the time, Miami, [etc.]. But for us, we’ll never host anything this big again.”

‘We went over the top’

This story, Kansas Citians say — the story of how their overlooked town became the base camp capital of the World Cup — begins with money. It begins with some $650 million invested in soccer infrastructure across the metro area since 2009, money that built the fields and facilities where Argentina, England and the Netherlands will soon train.

But the story accelerates in 2021, in crunch time for prospective World Cup cities, as FIFA officials toured 23 of them before picking 16. Of the 23, Kansas City was the third-smallest. It had to beat out Washington, D.C., the nation’s capital; Nashville, the Music City; and Denver. It sold itself as the “soccer capital of America,” but it was, inherently, an underdog straddling two flyover states — one with a gloomy, rundown airport that it couldn’t hide. (The new airport, which opened in 2023, was still under construction.)

So, on the evening of Oct. 20, 2021, Reid and the bid committee dispatched around 200 Sporting KC staffers and volunteers to roam the airport terminal as FIFA’s delegation arrived, “just to make it look like it was energetic,” Reid says.

Drivers, with FIFA inspectors in tow, took a carefully scripted route through the city, past billboards and buildings that bellowed: “WE WANT THE WORLD CUP.”

The following morning, bid officials enlisted locals to play soccer on a grassy area near FIFA’s hotel, along the path from meetings to a barbecue lunch.

“We went over the top,” Reid says. “I could probably guarantee you no other city was doing it to that degree.” That night, they reserved a suite at Sporting’s stadium for a U.S. women’s national team friendly. FIFA officials “ended up staying about 90 minutes after the match in our VIP suite,” Dietrich says, “just having a good time and partying.”

None of that, of course, directly explains why England and Argentina hand-picked Kansas City. But it speaks to the lengths that everyone, from politicians to random citizens, has gone to support or attract all aspects of the World Cup.

When administrators from touring teams would roll up to the Current’s facility in Riverside, Mo., for example, the club’s president, GM, head of facilities and a co-owner would be outside ready to greet them, Current owner Chris Long tells The Athletic. After handshakes and pleasantries, they’d head to a boardroom, then on a detailed tour of high-tech pitches, dining areas and other spaces.

“We wanted them to not only meet but hear from the top of the organization how we felt they would be treated,” Long says, and “how they would be able to have a secure, state-of-the-art stay in our area.”

Around a dozen teams, including France and Germany, ultimately visited Kansas City. Dietrich, a former Sporting KC exec, became something of a personal guide.

He took England’s delegation, including Tuchel, to Top Golf and for a few games of padel. (“When he played padel,” Dietrich says of Tuchel, “man, he was intense.”)

He drove the Argentine delegation — fitness coaches Luis Martín and Juan Tamone, and administrators Daniel Cabrera and Alberto Pernas — all around the region, bonding with them as he went. Cabrera was fluent in English. Dietrich knew just enough Spanish. Whenever he’d hear a personal anecdote, or learn about Argentina’s hotel needs, he’d grab his phone and tap out a text to managers at their next destination, priming them to make a strong impression. “I [was] driving with my knees,” Dietrich says with a laugh.

“It does sound obsessive, I know,” he adds. “But we are just that way.”

And he firmly believes that the obsessiveness, coupled with the warmth that he calls “KC kind,” is why international soccer’s giants came to trust and covet Kansas City.

“Details don’t just speak, they shout,” Dietrich says, reciting a quote. “People appreciate when the little things go right.”

How England was sold

England visited at least six times throughout 2025, and almost instantly, staffers loved the Sporting facility in Kansas City, Kan. At a cost of $75 million, it opened in 2018 and houses both the MLS club and various U.S. Soccer Federation activities. The English, and later Argentina, were impressed with everything from the multi-story gym to social spaces. What they couldn’t initially find was a proper hotel.

So, ahead of their second visit, Dietrich and his team compiled options that aligned with England’s needs. They eventually settled on a property south of Kansas City — reportedly the Inn at Meadowbrook — that England will rent out in its entirety for the duration of the World Cup. It’s adjacent to a park and “tranquil lakes,” the perfect place for players to unwind. “We,” the hotel’s website boasts, “have room to breathe.”

This, room to breathe, was part of Kansas City’s broader appeal. The region — spread across 14 counties, countless suburbs and 8,472 square miles — is the antithesis of other World Cup markets, such as New York.

“This is also a very easy, secure place to have your existence during what is otherwise a very stressful time,” Long says. “It’s not like there’s super intense media here. You’re not going to have an issue keeping players safe.”

Kansas City has developed a track record, too, for catering to superstars — such as Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes, teammate Travis Kelce and Kelce’s fiancée, Taylor Swift.

The final ingredient, for England, was an interpersonal touch. In June, when Tuchel, Football Association CEO Mark Bullingham and others visited Kansas City, Dietrich and Reid took them to Eddie V’s, an upscale restaurant. In a private room, they feasted on steaks and swapped stories from their time in soccer. “We had a blast,” Dietrich recalls. And they solidified a relationship that underpins any base camp commitment.

“At the end of the day,” Reid says, “you have to feel good about the people.”

Dietrich frames it as four key questions: “Can we trust you? Will you be a partner with us? Will you help us when we need it? Do you care?”

By June, England knew that the resounding answers were yes, yes, yes and yes.

And in December, Kansas City proved it.

The post-draw frenzy and ‘the Wild West’

Months of diligence and meticulous prep gave way to a “frenzy” on Dec. 6. Hundreds of coaches and team administrators filed into a second-floor ballroom at D.C.’s Capital Hilton to learn their World Cup schedules, then fanned out across North America to scout base camps that jibed with their group fixtures. Many scheduled tours; others knocked on doors, unannounced. “Tunisia showed up at [Sporting KC’s] stadium,” Reid recalls. “Our security guy called me, he’s like, ‘Hey, Tunisia’s here.’ We were like, ‘What?’”

“It was like the Wild West,” Reid says.

Argentina, though, held the keys. When it chose Sporting KC, dominoes started falling. The Netherlands, sitting second in the Kansas City pecking order, had visited in early 2025 and again soon after the draw. On follow-up calls over Zoom, the Dutch talked through logistics with the Current. They leant into the idea of using a world-class training facility purpose-built for women’s professional soccer, the first of its kind. They committed. And with that, everyone else was effectively shut out.

“Austria was interested in the Current facility,” Reid says. “They probably would’ve picked that if not for Argentina.” Instead, the Austrians were forced to head west.

But England — which also held extensive conversations with the Current — forced its way back into the conversation. After touring multiple other U.S. cities, it arranged yet another Kansas City visit and inquired about Swope. Kramer’s first thought was about budget — could the host committee afford to secure a third site? After discussions with local government officials and police departments, all involved decided they’d find a way.

Reid’s first thought, meanwhile, was: Uh, where will we train?

For years, he’d planned to send Sporting’s first team to Swope while a World Cup team took over the club’s main facility. If England were to take over Swope as well, he’d have to search for a Plan C.

So, he began searching. Two months later, he still is. Nonetheless, after discussing the dilemma with Sporting KC’s owners and GM, the thought of turning England away was never seriously considered.

When asked why — why would you give up two facilities at the expense of your own team? — Reid gets philosophical. Positioning Kansas City as the “base camp capital of the world,” he explains, will lift the city and his club. It will be a marketing tool and a recruiting tool. English and Argentine stars will go back to their clubs (and their agents) and glow about the K.C. experience. Perhaps, someday, one of them (or a friend) will return as a Sporting player.

And for the region, benefits are already evident. Kansas City is on the map. At this World Cup, it will be more visible than Boston, than Seattle, perhaps even Philadelphia and Atlanta.

“Perhaps, at one point, we were happy to be nominated, we were happy to have a seat at the table,” Kramer says. “Now, we want to be the best host city in the tournament.”

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

Kansas City Chiefs, Sporting KC, England, Kansas City Current, Netherlands, Argentina, MLS, Soccer, International Football, NWSL, Sports Business, FIFA Men's World Cup

2026 The Athletic Media Company

“Very difficult”- Paul Merson reveals how Chelsea could play key role in title race

“Very difficult”- Paul Merson reveals how Chelsea could play key role in title race
“Very difficult”- Paul Merson reveals how Chelsea could play key role in title race

Paul Merson thinks Chelsea could have a major role to play in the title race after the latest twist on Wednesday evening.

DOWNLOAD THE OFFICIAL CHELSEA NEWS APP FOR ALL THE LATEST UPDATES – STRAIGHT TO YOUR PHONE! ON THE APP STORE

Arsenal threw away a 2-0 lead against Wolves and conceded a last minute equaliser meaning Manchester City have the chance to close the gap to just two points if they beat Newcastle this weekend.

The Gunners still have to travel to the Etihad to face City in what is shaping up to be an even bigger game in the title race.

Paul Merson on Chelsea role in the title race

Chelsea currently sit nine points behind City in fifth place, with Champions League qualification the main aim for Liam Rosenior. 

The Blues host Burnley at Stamford Bridge on Saturday before they travel to The Emirates on March 1st in what is a massive game.

Chelsea could have a big say in the title race. (Photo by Warren Little/Getty Images)

Merson believes Arsenal’s next two games are much tougher than City’s who face Newcastle and Leeds, whilst the Gunners have the North London Derby before the game with Chelsea.

“I always look at the next two games. Arsenal have got Chelsea and Tottenham, two very difficult games,” he told Sky Sports.

“More so, no disrespect to Newcastle and Leeds, but you take Newcastle and Leeds over Arsenal’s games.”

Chelsea have already played Arsenal three times this season, and are yet to win, but they have an opportunity to have a major say in the title race next weekend.

Chelsea face tough March run

Whilst the title race has taken another twist, the race for Champions League football is also full of twists and turns.

More Stories / Latest News

“Very difficult”- Paul Merson reveals how Chelsea could play key role in title race

19th Feb 2026, 08:15am

“I don’t really like this” – Reece James reveals what he’s learnt about himself at Chelsea

19th Feb 2026, 07:45am

Chelsea’s academy wonderkid spotted in first team training again after debut last week

19th Feb 2026, 07:30am

Chelsea, Aston Villa, Manchester United and Liverpool are battling it out for three places, with one team set to miss out.

The Blues have a tough run of fixtures coming up after Burnley on Saturday, and in March they face Arsenal, Aston Villa, Newcastle and Everton, a run which could have a big say on Champions League qualification.

Check out the latest edition of Simon Phillips’ SPTC podcast here:

Real Madrid defender praises teammate after win vs Benfica: ‘We’re very lucky to have him’

Real Madrid defender praises teammate after win vs Benfica: ‘We’re very lucky to have him’
Real Madrid defender praises teammate after win vs Benfica: ‘We’re very lucky to have him’

For all of the controversy on the field in Real Madrid’s recent win over Benfica in Lisbon, it was Vinicius Jr. who had the last laugh as he scored the only goal on the night – a strike that gives his team a 1-0 lead heading into the second leg.

The Brazilian was in fine form on the night, and as disturbing as the racism episode was, he once again showed why he is one of the best players in the world.

After all, playing through such pressure, condemning atmosphere and slur from on-field colleagues and still pulling off a performance as he did is not everyone’s cup of tea.

Trent praises Vinicius

Real Madrid defender Trent Alexander-Arnold opened up to the media recently (h/t Madrid Xtra) where he had nothing but praise for his teammate Vinicius Jr., especially after his heroics and the circumstances they came under against Benfica.

“Vini’s goal? Incredible, he’s an incredible player. He shows his quality every game,” he began, in awe of the Brazilian’s goal on the night.

Vinicius scored a brilliant goal vs Benfica. (Photo by Angel Martinez/Getty Images)

He then called the winger to be one of the best players on the planet in his position, saying,

“He’s world-class. One of the best, if not the best in his position for many years now.”

Finally, Trent concluded by speaking on how fortunate he is to share the dressing room with the Real Madrid icon.

“We’re very lucky to have him. Hala Madrid!”

Trent returned from injury in Real Madrid’s win over Valencia and has started both of the team’s games after the Mestalla win. Against Benfica, he played all 90 minutes with two key passes and one big chance created.

So far this season, he already has two assists in just six league starts and it is clear that the best is yet to come from him.

The Tilehurst End Podcast Episode 451: Marriott Again

In the space of a week, Jack Marriott picks up four goals and four points for the Royals. The boys discuss what makes the striker so good, with Ross focusing on his ball-striking.

Ben leads us through a review of the Wycombe Wanderers and Bolton Wanderers games, with discussion of the grit shown by some players in the Trotters draw.   

In an email-heavy mailbag, listeners have questions about the pros and cons of Leam Richardson’s style of play, and the performances of Paddy Lane.

Thanks as always to our friends at ZCZ Films for sponsoring the pod!

Thank you to The Amazons for providing the theme song! 

Follow The Tilehurst End on Twitter @thetilehurstend 

Follow Ross on Bluesky @webberross.bsky.social

Follow Ben on Twitter @mrblthomas

The Tilehurst End Podcast can be enjoyed via PodBeanSpotify, Acast, YouTube or iTunes. A big thanks to all listeners who continue to pledge to our Patreon campaign.

Listeners can always get in touch with the podcast via our Twitter and Facebook pages as well as our email, thetilehurstend@gmail.com, with thoughts on the show, opinions on the team, and potential topics to sink our teeth into always welcome.

Download the show here

'Gordon brought back one or two memories of Shearer'

Anthony Gordon had already scored a hat-trick.

But the ruthless Newcastle United forward only had one thought in his mind at the Tofig Bahramov Republican Stadium.

Gordon had just won his side a penalty against Qarabag in the first leg of their last 16 Champions League play-off tie, and he was not about to hand the ball over after Kieran Trippier felt Nick Woltemade should get a chance to take the spot-kick.

It brought back one or two memories of the single-mindedness of Newcastle's greatest goalscorer, Alan Shearer.

In fact, after already netting four goals against Sheffield Wednesday, in 1999, Shearer told striker Paul Robinson where to go after his team-mate asked him if he could take a spot-kick.

So it was rather fitting that this was a night where Gordon overtook the Newcastle legend as the club's all-time top scorer in the Champions League with 10 goals.

Qarabag, in truth, played right into Gordon's hands. The sight of the rapid Gordon playing further forward than Woltemade appeared to catch Qarabag a little cold.

By the time they finally readjusted, and dropped deeper in the second half, the damage had been done, as Match of the Day pundit Thomas Hitzlsperger noted.

"I have to say I was surprised by how high Qarabag defended, and how they kept a high line in the first half when the Newcastle goals were going in," said the former Aston Villa and Germany midfielder.

"I was thinking: 'Are they not watching Newcastle and their recent games?' Why did they allow so much space for Gordon, who was brilliant all evening?"

Gordon has impressed in such a role away from home in recent weeks - opening the scoring at Anfield last month and setting up Jacob Ramsey's winner against Spurs last week.

He gives Eddie Howe's side something different through the middle with his movement and pace, and the Azerbaijan Premier League champions could not cope.

"He's been really good in that position," Howe said. "Looking back to the Liverpool game, where I thought he was excellent, he scores.

"He's shown he wants to play there and then he's got the quality to play there. His pressing today was incredible for us. That gave us the platform to rebuild off of his work.

"Of course, he's taken the four goals and will get the headlines, naturally, but his all-round game was really strong."

Read more on Gordon's record-breaking night

Inside USA's women's hockey team: A complete roster and more to know 2026 Olympics team

Hilary Knight

Inside USA's women's hockey team: A complete roster and more to know 2026 Olympics team originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Both the United States and Canada continue to lead in women's hockey and are now set to compete for gold.

In their first face-off at the Winter Games, the U.S. women’s hockey team delivered a commanding 5-0 victory over Canada, claiming the top spot in Group A.

The rivalry between the USA and Canada is considered one of the most intense in Olympic history, fueled by their long-standing dominance, numerous gold-medal matchups, and fierce competition, particularly in ice hockey.

While the USA women's team has been impressive, hockey remains a key part of Canadian national identity, and a defeat to the U.S. is often seen as a major disappointment, regardless of the U.S. team's skill level. 

What will the USA's roster look like as they head into the gold medal game?

The Sporting News provides all the essential information about Team USA.

MORE 2026 OLYMPICS: Live medal tracker | Viewer's guide | Day-by-day schedule

USA Olympic men's hockey roster

The 2026 U.S. Olympic Women's Ice Hockey roster consists of 23 players, led by captain and five-time Olympian Hilary Knight.

The team combines experienced veterans from the Professional Women’s Hockey League (PWHL) with rising stars from the NCAA. 

No.NamePosition
33Gwyneth PhillipsG
31Aerin FrankelG
30Ava McNaughtonG
37Abbey MurphyF
27Taylor HeiseF
26Kendall Coyne SchofieldF
25Alex Carpenter (A)F
24Joy DunneF
23Hannah BilkaF
22Tessa JaneckeF
21Hilary Knight (C)F
17Britta Curl-SalemmeF
16Hayley ScamurraF
13Grace ZumwinkleF
12Kelly PannekF
9Kirsten SimmsF
10Laila EdwardsD
8Haley WinnD
6Rory GuildayD
5Megan Keller (A)D
4Caroline HarveyD
3Cayla BarnesD
2Lee SteckleinD

Who coaches the U.S. women's hockey team?

John Wroblewski is the head coach of the U.S. Women's Olympic and National Ice Hockey Team. He has been leading the team since August 2022 and is contracted through the 2026 Olympic Winter Games.

Here is what the full staff looks like.

NameRoleTeam
John WroblewskiHead coach--
Shari DickermanAssistant coachMinnesota State
Brent HillAssistant coachQuinnipiac University
Josh ScibaAssistant coachNew York Sirens

USA women's hockey Olympics history

YearSiteResult
1998NaganoGold
2002Salt Lake CitySilver
2006TorinoBronze
2010VancouverSilver
2014SochiSilver
2018PyeongChangGold
2022BeijingSilver

Olympic women's hockey schedule 2026

Here's a look at the remaining schedule for the Olympic women's hockey tournament in Milan.

Quarterfinals

DateMatchupTime
2/13Sweden 2, Czechia 010:40 a.m.
2/13USA 6, Italy 03:10 p.m.
2/14Canada 5, Germany 110:40 a.m.
2/14Switzerland 1, Finland 03:10 p.m.

Semifinals

DateMatchupTime
2/16USA 5, Sweden 010:40 a.m.
2/16Canada 2, Switzerland 13:10 p.m.

Bronze medal game

DateMatchupTime
2/19Sweden vs. Switzerland8:40 a.m.

Gold medal game

DateMatchupTime
2/19USA vs. Canada1:10 p.m.

MORE: Updated medal count for Team USA

Laporta talks Messi, La Masia, Camp Nou, refereeing – ‘There are certain referees who really mess things up for us’

Laporta talks Messi, La Masia, Camp Nou, refereeing – ‘There are certain referees who really mess things up for us’
Laporta talks Messi, La Masia, Camp Nou, refereeing – ‘There are certain referees who really mess things up for us’

On Wednesday, Joan Laporta visited Girona to present his project for re-election as president of FC Barcelona.

After outlining the main pillars of his programme, under the slogan “Defensem el Barça”, the former president answered questions from members and supporters.

On Messi

Asked about former captain and club legend Lionel Messi and what he would do regarding the Argentine if elected, Laporta repeated his stance of honouring the eight-time Ballon d’Or winner with a statue.

“Like Kubala and Cruyff, I think Messi deserves a statue, and we should also arrange a testimonial match, which we’re open to doing whenever they want,” said Laporta.

“It would be wonderful to see, given everything he’s given to Barça, and I also want to say that Barça have given him a lot. I think the statue and the tribute are what he deserves,” he added.

“He has a valid contract where he is, and it ends in 2028. I think that would be ideal.”

On the recent loss to Girona and refereeing issues

The topic on which he spoke at greatest length was refereeing, after controversial officiating had cost Barcelona in their most recent La Liga clash against Girona this past Monday.

Although Laporta argued that the club must not dwell on constant complaints but instead strive to be a better team, he maintained that he perceives a refereeing trend unfavourable to Barcelona and favourable to their rivals, Real Madrid.

“The club has sent a letter to the Federation, which oversees the Technical Committee of Referees. It’s a very well-argued document, attempting to be constructive with indisputable facts,” he said, kicking things off.

Talking about the particular incident against Girona, where a foul on Jules Kounde went unawarded in the lead-up to their winning goal, Laporta elaborated:

“And that was before the stamp on Kounde… And we Barça fans are also proud of Girona; those of us from Barcelona also have a part of Girona in us. In fact, I’m happy for their victories as long as they’re not against us.

“But the stamp was blatant, and regarding the penalty on Lamine, if there’s a VAR system that’s supposed to monitor irregularities, then it should see that two players entered the area first.”

Laporta insisted that the team has the capability to evolve beyond this, but also highlighted how this blatant double-standard treatment could not be ignored.

“In any case, what’s happening here is that we can’t just dwell on complaining; that’s not the behaviour of a club of Barça’s stature. We must be clear, express our opinion to the relevant bodies, and try to improve this group,” he said.

Laporta unhappy with refereeing in Barcelona games. (Photo by David Ramos/Getty Images)

“But we’re starting to see trends that are inexplicable, that are difficult to explain. There are certain referees, and it’s a constant, recurring issue, that when they call our games, they really mess things up for us, and that’s the reality,” continued the ex-president.

“You could name them all, and it’s happened more than once, with identical plays. They’ve even called the opposite of what they’ve called against us, to our detriment. That’s blatant.”

Pointing fingers at Real Madrid without actually naming them, Laporta continued: “When we say we defend Barça against everything and everyone, this is what we mean.

“Some people just can’t accept what we are, what we represent, or what we can achieve as a team because, on the field, we have a very competitive team that can aspire to almost anything.

“But it’s true that when we’re going through a rough patch, they try to crush us. And when the others are going through a rough patch, they help them out; they’ve learned to swim and they dive right in.

“But we have to accept all of this, we have to fight against it. The best way to deal with it is to be better, to be a better team, to try to overcome this adversity.”

On Camp Nou and La Masia

Laporta also addressed Barcelona’s push for hosting the 2030 FIFA World Cup final at the Spotify Camp Nou, confirming that they were in talks with the City Council for the same.

“It’s perfect that it will be played at Camp Nou, but a lot of work needs to be done first. The general plan needs to be amended; we’ve requested this from the city council, but it’s not just about finishing the stadium,” he said.

“FIFA requires that the entire stadium’s surroundings be adapted, and everything needs to be prepared, including the university campus and the esplanade.”

Regarding the sporting project, Laporta insisted that if he returned as president, Barcelona would continue investing in talent in La Masia while following the roadmap laid out by current sporting director, Deco.

“We will continue to invest in La Masia; it is the central pillar of our sporting project. Deco’s guiding principle is this: if a position needs strengthening, we first look within the academy,” he said.

“It’s an academy that produces highly talented players, and if we don’t have the right player there, we look elsewhere.

“At La Masia, we’ve already identified a couple of positions where players aren’t emerging, and we’re already looking for young players to come and develop, as well as identifying players to strengthen the team. 

Concluding, Laporta said: La Masia will continue to be the cornerstone of our sporting project because it makes the club sustainable both financially and in terms of its performance.”

Source: Mundo Deportivo

McGinn says VAR in Scotland is 'a mess' - gossip

Scotland midfielder John McGinn criticised VAR north of the border as "a mess" as his brother Paul's Motherwell exited the Scottish Cup at the hands of Aberdeen in a tie featuring three red cards. (Sun)

Motherwell have contacted Scottish head of refereeing Willie Collum after having two players sent off at Pittodrie. (Record)

Dundee have received positive news on Brad Halliday's injury but Scott Wright is a doubt to face former club Aberdeen on Saturday. (Courier - subscription required)

Head coach David Gray believes "versatility" can help Hibernian as they travel to face Celtic Park on Sunday. (Edinburgh Evening News - subscription required)

Reo Hatate does not have an attitude problem, says Celtic manager Martin O'Neill following talks with the Japan midfielder. (Sun)

O'Neill wants to see Hatate "knuckle down". (Record)

Former Celtic target Kasper Hogh scored Bodo/Glimt's third in Wednesday's 3-1 Champions League knockout round first leg over Inter Milan in Norway. (Sun)

Scotland great Eddie Gray is disappointed his great-nephews Archie and Harry look likely to represent England rather than Scotland. (Scotsman - subscription required)

Transfer rumour roundup: Chelsea contemplate Delap departure; PSG join Rogers race

Transfer rumour roundup: Chelsea contemplate Delap departure; PSG join Rogers race
Transfer rumour roundup: Chelsea contemplate Delap departure; PSG join Rogers race

Once again, we're back with the latest transfer stories and speculation, all in one place. Here's Thursday's transfer talk.

Liam Delap was hot property last summer, with Chelsea winning a multi-team tussle to land the forward from relegated Ipswich. Things haven't quite gone to plan for Delap since, who's struggled to make much of an impact.

After just onePremier League goal this season, Chelsea are considering an exit. Caught Offside claim interest in Delap hasn't exactly dwindled, with Manchester United, Newcastle, Everton, Sunderland and Brighton all open to a deal.

Over at Aston Villa, there's growing interest inMorgan Rogers. Liverpool are the latest Premier League team to enter the conversation, as per TEAMtalk, with Arsenal, Tottenham, Chelsea and Manchester United all in the mix. But a huge complication is emerging over The Channel. Paris Saint-Germain have been monitoring the 23-year-old throughout the season.

Bodø/Glimt’s fairytale run in the Champions League has caught the imagination and one of the stars of the show could soon be on the move. Having seen a transfer toNorwich City collapse in January, Kasper Høgh now has serious options. SportsBoom say Spurs are one of the striker's suitors, alongside Wolves.

Another goalscorer in demand isPromise David. Everton, Leeds, and West Ham have all checked in on the towering Union SG goal-getter. The Canadian will cost €20m, reports Ekrem Konur.

Fellow journoBence Bocsak has somehow stumbled upon Liverpool's summer shortlist. Six midfield names feature, including Real Madrid midfielder Eduardo Camavinga and Crystal Palace playmaker Adam Wharton. Nottingham Forest's Elliot Anderson, AZ's Kees Smit, PSG's Warren Zaire-Emery and Lille's Ayyoub Bouaddi complete the group.

Elsewhere,Marcos Senesi is fast emerging as one of the most coveted free agents of the summer. The Bournemouth defender's deal is coming to its conclusion, with clubs across Europe scrambling for his signature.

Sekou Kone: Man United fans back youngster despite nightmare start to loan

Sekou Kone: Man United fans back youngster despite nightmare start to loan
Sekou Kone: Man United fans back youngster despite nightmare start to loan

Manchester United, as in every season, have numerous players out on loan this year.

To follow where all of United’s loanees are playing this season, click here.

Some players have remained at the same club all season, while others began their senior journey this January. As a result, The Peoples Person asked its readers to vote on who they think will be the most successful January loanee.

Sekou Kone

35% of readers feel that Sekou Kone will perform the best on loan for the remainder of the season.

It has not been the best of starts, though, as he has only played a 10-minute cameo for FC Lausanne-Sport and was disappointingly left out of their Conference League squad. Nonetheless, fans feel the exciting midfield talent will eventually prove his worth to the Swiss club.

Harry Amass

23% of readers felt that Harry Amass would succeed the most at Norwich City.

This was logical, as Amass was incredibly successful at Sheffield Wednesday but was recalled and sent out to Norwich City last month. Sadly, he picked up a serious injury in training with the Canaries, and it appears that he will return to Carrington for treatment.

Toby Collyer

After breaking through into the first team last season, like Amass, Collyer was sent on loan in the summer.

A mixture of injury and an inability to break into the first team resulted in his loan to West Bromwich Albion being cut short. He subsequently joined Hull City in January, and 12% of fans feel he will have the best loan.

Sadly, he has also picked up an injury but, luckily, it is not as serious as Amass’s and he will likely return to action in a few weeks.

Gabriele Biancheri

The sharp-shooting academy striker was given his first senior opportunity by Rotherham United in January when he sealed a move to the League One club.

11% of readers feel that the young striker will have the best end to the season, and he has so far played one game in League One.

James Scanlon

Surprisingly, only 8% of fans feel that the Gibraltar international will have the best loan.

He has already scored his first senior goal for Swindon Town and also has over 20 matches of international experience, proving he can mix it at senior level.

Jacob Devaney

7% of supporters felt that the young Irishman would be the cream of the crop regarding January loans.

Devaney has started very well for St Mirren and, like Scanlon, has already scored his first senior club goal for the Scottish Premiership side.

Finally, just 4% of fans believe Ethan Wheatley will have the best loan. On the one hand, he has more experience, having already played senior football for Walsall and Northampton over recent months.

He made the switch to Bradford City in January, but he was hardly prolific on his previous loans, so perhaps fans are wary to back the 20-year-old on this occasion.

Sekou Koné signing for Man United, posted on Instagram

online polls


The Peoples Person has been one of the world’s leading Man United news sites for over a decade. Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

Manchester City smelling blood as Arsenal suffer fresh title setback against Wolves

Manchester City smelling blood as Arsenal suffer fresh title setback against Wolves
Manchester City smelling blood as Arsenal suffer fresh title setback against Wolves

Manchester City have been handed another lifeline in the title race after Arsenal threw away a two-goal lead in a 2-2 draw against Wolves at the Molineux Stadium on Wednesday night.

The Gunners have taken their foot off the gas in recent weeks and allowed Manchester City claw their way back into the conversation for Premier League glory, again squandering a lead to only take a point against Wolves.

City are five points adrift of the north Londoners ahead of Sunday night’s meeting with Newcastle United at the Etihad Stadium, with Mikel Arteta and co entering a must-win derby against Tottenham.

Arsenal have allowed City – who made a sluggish start to 2026 underpinned by a consecutive trio of draws against Sunderland, Chelsea and Brighton in their first three league games of the calendar year – to keep their hopes of a fifth league title in six seasons alive.

Pep Guardiola and co have turned the tide after a poor January, having won four games on the bounce and avoided defeat in seven games in all competitions as they vie for silverware on four fronts in the second half of the season.

The Blues gave themselves a renewed lease of life in the title race after completing a thrilling, late comeback to run out 2-1 winners over Liverpool at Anfield a few weeks ago – a result that completed a first Premier League double for City over the Reds in 89 years.

It remains to be seen whether a Manchester City side who are still at a nascent stage of their transition under director of football Hugo Viana have the fuel to sustain a genuine title challenge in what remains of the season.

City have been far from their best in recent months but the last few weeks signal that the ship is turning at the Etihad Stadium and buoyed by a monumental result at Anfield, the Blues may just be able to put a winning run together to usurp Arsenal once again.

Not even the most optimistic Manchester City fans will be expecting their side to win all of their remaining 12 Premier League games, but it is worth mentioning that the Blues have a much favourable run of outstanding fixtures between now and the end of the season.

City have already faced Manchester United, Tottenham and Liverpool home and away this season and after Arsenal’s latest slip-up against Wolves, Guardiola and co have destiny in their hands if they can build on their recent purple patch and put the Gunners to the sword.

Guardiola and the Manchester City dressing room will be smelling blood as they witness Arsenal faltering week-in, week-out and there is more than enough title-winning experience in the new-look first-team squad at the Etihad Stadium to give it a real push in the title race.

The jury remains out on whether City can fulfil their aspirations of winning silverware on several fronts, with the Blues also facing Arsenal in the Carabao Cup final at Wembley on March 22, having also progressed to the fifth round of the FA Cup and the Round of 16 stage of the UEFA Champions League.

O'Toole 'grateful' for chance to play loose-head

Prop Tom O'Toole said he wants to take the opportunity to play loose-head for Ireland "with both hands".

O'Toole plays tight-head for his club, Ulster, but played in the loose-head position when he came off the bench for Andy Farrell's side against Italy.

Despite the 27-year-old having limited experience at loose-head, injuries to Andrew Porter, Paddy McCarthy and Jack Boyle before the Six Nations began meant that Farrell's options for the number one shirt became more limited.

"To be honest, I am playing it just day-by-day. I'm excited to get the opportunity and to be involved in this team and this squad, that it what my main focus is," O'Toole said.

"I try don't look too far ahead and when I am back to my provincial side, I'm back to tight-head. There's been a few injuries to give me an opportunity. I am grateful and I want to take it with both hands.

"I was confident enough in the preparation I have done over the last couple of years. I have kept it as something chipping away behind the scenes and keep working at it so, to get an opportunity, I was delighted to put that training into performance."

The Ulster prop featured in the Ireland squad when they won back-to-back Six Nations in 2023 and 2024 and also travelled to the 2023 Rugby World Cup.

However, competition for places in Ireland's front row has meant his involvement has not always been consistent.

"Being out of this group and then back in, I am really enjoying it and really want to enjoy each and every day with this group," O'Toole continued.

"I think it should be difficult for everybody [not being in Ireland squads]. I maybe didn't play as much as other guys but was in the group for a few years and was in the Grand Slam team and went to the World Cup.

"You spend so much time together; you become like family. I am 27 now, so I am hopefully coming into a big few years of my career."

🥐 More Vini, more Champions... 5 stories to start your Thursday

🥐 More Vini, more Champions... 5 stories to start your Thursday

The football scene wakes up today marked by a mix of off-field tension and major surprises in the main European competitions.

While the debate on racism returns to the eye of the storm after incendiary statements by José Luis Chilavert against Vinícius Jr., the action on the pitch has not let up.

The Champions League and the Premier League have produced unexpected results that force a rethink of the favorites heading into the decisive stretch of the season, especially after the stumbles of giants like Atlético de Madrid and Arsenal.


The Vinícius controversy intensifies

The debate over racism in football has taken a bitter turn. After Gianni Infantino’s support for Vinícius Jr., Benfica has come out in defense of their player Prestianni. However, the discordant note was struck by former goalkeeper José Luis Chilavert, who ignited social media with statements justifying the attacks on the Brazilian, reopening a wound that seems far from healing in elite sports.

Nightmare night for Atlético

In the Champions, Atlético de Madrid experienced a “witches’ night” in Belgium. Cholo Simeone’s men squandered a 0-2 lead against Brugge after a brilliant first half, only to end up desperately holding on for a 3-3 draw. Defensive frailty in the second half, where they conceded three goals, leaves the tie wide open and raises many doubts about Atlético’s solidity.

Surprises and thrashings in Europe

The European matchday left Inter Milan shivering. The cold in Norway was too much for the Nerazzurri, who fell 3-1 to a Bodo Glimt side that is no longer a surprise. On the other hand, Newcastle steamrolled in Azerbaijan with a resounding 1-6 win over Qarabag, while Leverkusen did their job by winning 0-2 in Greece against Olympiacos.

Arsenal revives the Premier League

An unexpected plot twist in England. Arsenal, who were comfortably leading 0-2, allowed the bottom team to equalize in the 94th minute. A stunning goal by Hugo Bueno not only rescued an epic point for his team, but also tightens the title race, leaving the Gunners with no margin for error after an unforgivable lapse in concentration.

Cubarsí, confident of a comeback

Pau Cubarsí, already established as a regular for Hansi Flick at just 19 years old, has spoken to Mundo Deportivo. The Catalan center-back is self-critical after Barça’s last two defeats, but sends a message of optimism: he is convinced they will come back against Atlético. Cubarsí has unwavering faith in the support of the fans to fight for the most coveted trophy.

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here.

Commanders should target underrated Broncos' defender

NFL free agency is only a few weeks away, and the Washington Commanders could be very busy. One NFL insider thinks Washington could be capable of "fireworks" during the early stages of free agency.

Washington has plenty of needs and money to spend. Most of Washington's needs are on the defensive side of the ball. New defensive coordinator Daronte Jones needs an infusion of talent, but with only two picks in the top 100 of the 2026 NFL Draft, the Commanders will likely target multiple defensive starters during free agency next month.

Washington badly needs pass rushers. The only edge rushers under contract in 2026 are Dorance Armstrong (coming off knee surgery) and Javontae Jean-Baptiste (torn pec in 2025). Von Miller, Jacob Martin, Preston Smith, Jalyn Holmes and Drake Jackson are all free agents. There's no doubt that the Commanders will add multiple edge rushers this offseason, either via free agency or the NFL draft.

Without knowing what type of scheme Jones will run, it's tough to project what Washington needs the most: multiple edge rushers or someone who can create pressure from the interior. The Commanders do have Daron Payne, Javon Kinlaw and Jer'Zhan Newton under contract next season. Payne is a good pass rusher, at times, while Newton has flashed, but lacks consistency.

While everyone debates the merits of Washington signing an edge rusher like Trey Hendrickson, Odafe Oweh, Joey Bosa, or Boye Mafe, what if signing another interior pass rusher is the move?

The top interior rusher on the market will be John Franklin-Myers of the Denver Broncos. Denver has the cap space to re-sign Franklin-Myers, but hasn't reached a deal with him. He was a big part of the Broncos' top-ranked defense in 2025, recording 25 tackles, including six for loss, 7.5 sacks and 15 quarterback hits. Franklin-Myers recorded at least seven sacks in each of the last two seasons.

Franklin-Myers is older than some other free-agent defenders, aside from Hendrickson. He'll turn 30 in September. However, recent evidence proves he's playing some of the best football of his eight-year NFL career. He's also a success story.

Originally a fourth-round pick of the Los Angeles Rams in the 2018 NFL Draft out of Stephen F. Austin, Franklin-Myers was cut after his rookie season. He landed with the New York Jets, where he played for four seasons until joining the Broncos in 2024. His pressure numbers have improved over the past two seasons. He's also experienced playing in the 3-4 and 4-3 defenses. Franklin-Myers has played defensive end and defensive tackle, so his versatility is an asset.

Another benefit for anyone who signs Franklin-Myers is that he is also stout against the run.

Spotrac projects Franklin-Myers to earn $7.9 million annually on his next deal. If he hits the open market, he'll almost certainly earn more.

So, while the focus is on edge defenders, don't look past Franklin-Myers. He should be high on Washington's list.

This article originally appeared on Commanders Wire: Washington Commanders should target Broncos DL John Franklin-Myers

Live updates as Aerin Frankel, U.S. women's hockey go for Olympic gold

The United States women's ice hockey team plays for the 2026 Olympic gold medal Feb. 19 in Milan, Italy when it takes on Canada. Face-off is scheduled for 1:10 p.m., Eastern time, in Milan, Italy.

The U.S. is going for its third gold - also winning the tournament in its first year in 1998 in Nagano, Japan and in 2018 in Pyeongchang, South Korea.

Aerin Frankel, 26, a Westchester County native who calls Chappaqua home, is the starting goaltender for Team USA. A watch party is scheduled during the game at Chappaqua Performing Arts Center.

Frankel has three shutouts in the four games she's played so far in the 2026 Olympics. Frankel is 4-0 with a 0.25 goals against average and a .985 save percentage, making 67 saves on 68 shots entering the gold medal game.

  • Frankel made 13 saves in her Olympic debut in the U.S. 5-1 win over Czechia on Feb. 5.
  • Frankel made 11 saves for her first Olympic shutout in the U.S. 5-0 win over Finland on Feb. 7.
  • Frankel did not play against Switzerland.
  • Frankel made 20 saves in a 5-0 shutout of Canada on Feb. 10.
  • Frankel did not play in the quarterfinal against Italy.
  • Frankel shut out Sweden 5-0 in the semifinal on Feb. 16.

"I mean, any time I put on this jersey, I feel just so lucky to be a part of this group because there's so much talent in our locker room and it's just so much fun to play with the best players in the world," Frankel told USA TODAY after Monday's game. "It's hard to kind of zoom out where you're here and look at the big picture because you're so focused on the day to day. But I think we look back at this tournament, what we've done so far has been amazing."

Check back for details from the game, photos from the game, sights and sounds from the watch party and insights from staff.

When does the U.S. women's team play Canada for the Olympic gold medal? Where can I watch it?

The U.S. women's hockey team plays Canada for the Olympic gold medal at 1:10 p.m. Eastern on Thursday, Feb. 18 in Milan, Italy. The game is being broadcast in the U.S. on USA Network and is being streamed on Peacock.

Before that happens, the bronze medal game between Switzerland and Sweden will be played at 8:40 a.m. That contest will also be streamed on Peacock.

Hockey is well known for lettuce, but Aerin Frankel judges actual lettuce on Instagram

Since the U.S. Olympic team have become household names, it surprises Aerin Frankel that she started becoming well known for her opinions on Caesar salads.

What?

Frankel has been posting reviews of Caesar salads on an Instagram account called @painbyromaine.

"It's honestly just been one of my favorite foods for a while now," Frankel told USA TODAY Sports on Friday, following Team USA's 6-0 quarterfinal win over host nation Italy.

Aerin Frankel becomes first goaltender in Olympic history to shut out Canada

With her shutout in the preliminary round, Aerin Frankel became the first goalie in Olympic history to shut out Canada as she had 20 saves in a 5-0 win on Feb. 10.

While the Americans have won gold twice in the Olympics, Canada won it the other five times and the Canadians have been in the gold medal game in every Olympics since women's hockey started in the Games in 1998: 2002 (Salt Lake City), 2006 (Turin), 2010 (Vancouver), 2014 (Sochi) and 2022 (Beijing).

Feb 16, 2026; Milan, Italy; Aerin Frankel (31) of the United States looks on during the second period against Sweden in a women's ice hockey semifinal during the Milano Cortina 2026 Olympic Winter Games at Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images

Aerin Frankel's path began at Westchester Skating Academy

While Aerin Frankel has represented the U.S. internationally before - winning gold, silver and gold - at the last three World Championships, this is her first Olympics.

She attended Horace Greeley High School in Chappaqua her freshman year before transferring to hockey powerhouse Shattuck-St. Mary's in Minnesota. Frankel played collegiately for five seasons at Northeastern University in Boston, including a grad year granted to her because of the COVID-19 pandemic. She won the Patty Kazmaier Award given to the top NCAA Div. I player in 2021.

She's been a member of the Professional Women's Hockey League's Boston Fleet since the league launched in 2023-24. This season, she is 12-8-3 with a 2.28 goals against average and a .921 save percentage.

And it all started here in Westchester. Frankel played for Rivertown Legends coach Kevin Hagens' Westchester Vipers club team for four seasons.

"The boys couldn't even score on her," Hagens told ice hockey reporter Nancy Haggerty. "She was special from the get-go."

Nancy Haggerty covers ice hockey for The Journal News/lohud. Phil Strum is local sports editor for The Journal News/lohud.

This article originally appeared on Rockland/Westchester Journal News: Live updates as Aerin Frankel, U.S. women's hockey go for Olympic gold

The Daily Hilario: Thursday

Rain falls on Battery Street in downtown as a storm moves over San Francisco, California Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. (Photo by Jessica Christian/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

Second

4 – Anthony Gordon is only the second player in UEFA Champions League history to score four goals in the first half of a game, after Luiz Adriano for Shakhtar Donetsk against BATE Borisov in October 2014. Another. pic.twitter.com/wPmYvPSCDb

— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) February 18, 2026

Most

Most victories by an English manager in a single Champions League campaign:

◉ 5 – Bobby Robson (2002/03)
◉ 5 – Graham Potter (2022/23)
◉ 5 – Eddie Howe (2025/26) 🆕

One more for the record. 👏 pic.twitter.com/vqedP3njtG

— Squawka Dugout (@SquawkaDugout) February 18, 2026

Hmm

No player has completed more successful dribbles (27) than Michael Olise in the Champions League this season. 🤤#UCLpic.twitter.com/MlibwcZh0a

— WhoScored (@WhoScored) February 18, 2026


Where to watch Nebraska high school wrestling state tournament: Schedule, channel, live stream for NSAA championships

Wrestling generic FTR

Where to watch Nebraska high school wrestling state tournament: Schedule, channel, live stream for NSAA championships originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

After the dual wrestling championships, athletes from all over Nebraska will compete for individual glory when they participate in the 2026 high school wrestling state tournament.

The boys are set to compete from February 19 to 21, not long after the girls did.

There will be four forms of classes at the tournament: Class A, B, C, and D. The following weight classes will be showcased: 106, 113, 120, 126, 132, 138, 144, 150, 157, 165, 175, 190, 215, and 285.  

Prep (Class A), Omaha Skutt Catholic (Class B), Battle Creek (Class C), and Burwell (Class D) stood tall at the end of last season. Who will have bragging rights this year?

The Sporting News has all the details on how to watch the Nebraska high school wrestling state tournament.

Where to watch Nebraska high school wrestling state tournament

The Nebraska high school wrestling state tournament will not be broadcast on a TV channel. You can stream the tournament live on NFHS Network.

The NFHS Network offers two basic plans: an Annual Pass ($6.67 per month) or a Monthly Pass ($13.99 per month). These plans give subscribers the ability to watch live sporting events and create clips of their favorite moments from games.

Last American woman to win figure skating medal: How Alysa Liu can end USA's 20-year Olympics drought

Last American woman to win figure skating medal: How Alysa Liu can end USA's 20-year Olympics drought originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The United States has a long history of being competitive in women's Olympic figure skating, but has been in a medal drought for the event. 

Team USA is searching for its first medal in women's single figure skating since 2006. That year, Sasha Cohen took second. The last American woman to win a gold medal in singles figure skating was Sarah Hughes, who pulled off that accomplishment in 2002 when the Winter Games were held in Salt Lake City. 

Women's singles figure skating is split into two mini events. Figure skaters will complete the short program for one score, then the free skate for another, and the final standings will combine the two. 

American figure skater Alysa Liu is looking to become the first figure skater representing the U.S. to earn a medal in the event since 2006. She heads into the free skate with 76.59 points, sitting in third place. Liu currently trails Japan's Ami Nakai (78.71) and Kaori Sakamoto (77.23). 

Here is more on how Liu can end the USA's medal drought in women's figure skating.

MORE 2026 OLYMPICS: Live medal tracker | Viewer's guide | Day-by-day schedule

Last American woman to win figure skating medal at Olympics

The last American woman to win a singles figure skating medal at the Olympics was Sasha Cohen. She won the silver medal at the 2006 Olympics, and over the last 20 years, no American woman has registered any medal in the singles figure skating event. 

The singles figure skating event had a similar format to the one it has today. It consisted of the short program and the free skate, with the scores from each event combined for the final standings. 

Cohen crushed the short program, scoring 66.73 in the total segment. She had a .03 point lead on Russia's Irina Slutskaya and a .71 lead over Japan's Shizuka Arakawa. Cohen didn't do quite as well in the free skate, finishing with a 116.3. This was good enough for second place, and she had a two-point lead over Slutskaya in third. The problem is that Arakawa posted a 125.32 and dominated the event. 

Arakawa finished with a total score of 191.34 for the gold medal, while Cohen came in second with a 183.36.  

MORE: What's the story behind Alysa Liu's teeth piercings?

USA's 20-year medal drought timeline

2010

The top American figure skater in 2010 ended up being Mirai Nagasu. She finished with 190.15 total points, which put her in fourth. She finished 12 points shy of Canadian figure skater Joannie Rochette for the bronze medal.

Rachael Flatt actually was the best American in the short program. She finished with 64.64 points and in fifth, one spot ahead of Nagasu. Flatt ended up finishing in eighth overall for the event. 

2014

2014 marked the second straight Olympics that an American finished just off the podium. The best American figure skater that year was Gracie Gold, and she finished in fourth place, just 11.20 points behind Italy's Carolina Kostner. Gold was fourth in the short program and fifth in the free skate, the best American competitor that year in both events. 

2018

The United States had three solid competitors in 2018. Bradie Tennell, Mirai Nagasu and Karen Chen were all expected to be competitors for the podium. They finished in a group of the final standings, ranked between ninth and 11th.

Ironically, the trio finished ninth to 11th in the short program with Nagasu leading the way. Tennell finished ninth in the free skate, with Chen in 11th and Nagasu in 12th in what ended up being a subpar performance for Team USA. 

2022

This is not the first time Liu has been a high-profile name for the United States in figure skating at the Olympics. She finished in sixth place in 2022. 

Liu was seventh in the short program that year, posting a 69.50. She finished in sixth of the free skate with 139.45 points. That year's competition was dominated by the ROC. Anna Shcherbakova finished with 255.95 points while Alexandra Trusova had 251.73. To put their dominance in perspective, third place went to Japan's Kaori Sakamoto who had 233.13 points, 19 more than fourth place. 

MORE: Youngest, oldest American Olympians in 2026

Last American figure skater to win individual gold

The last American figure skater to win an individual gold medal was Nathan Chen. He won the 2022 gold medal for men's singles figure skating. 

Chen had the top score for the short program, with a 113.97. He then dominated the free skate and had a 218.63, which was a near-17-point margin of victory over second place. Overall, Chen had 332.60 total points, finishing in front of Japan's Yuma Kagiyama (310.05) and Shoma Uno (293.00).

MORE: Explaining the differences between ice dancing and figure skating

History of American figure skating medal winners

Figure skating has been held at the Olympics since 1908, except for the lone absence in 2012. In that time, the United States has won 20 medals. Seven of them have been gold medals, eight were silver and five were bronze. 

Here is a look at who has won a women's single figure skating gold medal for the U.S., and the year they won it. 

YearFigure Skater
1956Tenley Albright
1960Carol Heiss
1968Peggy Fleming
1976Dorothy Hamill
1992Kristi Yamaguchi
1998Tara Lipinski
2002Sarah Hughes

Where to watch Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic softball: Full schedule, TV channels, live stream for 2026 tournament

Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic softball

Where to watch Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic softball: Full schedule, TV channels, live stream for 2026 tournament originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Four full days of softball. What more could you ask for? The Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic returns with 30 of the best teams in the nation swinging for the fences in a round-robin style competition.

Programs like Oklahoma, UCLA, Duke, Oregon, Texas Tech, South Carolina, Washington, Nebraska, Texas A&M, UC San Diego, Fullerton, LMU, Long Beach State and more will take the field at the Big League Dreams Sports Park in California.

It's set to be an unforgettable weekend packed full of softball. Here's how you can watch it all with a schedule and live stream information for every game.

Where to watch Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic 2026

Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic games will not be broadcast on TV. All games will be available to live stream exclusively on FloCollege.

New subscribers can get a 15 percent discount on a FloCollege annual subscription through The Sporting News' exclusive offer. Purchasing a FloCollege subscription gives sports fans access to live streams, event replays and FloSports Originals.

Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic 2026 schedule

  • Dates: Thursday, Feb. 19-Sunday, Feb. 22
  • Location: Cathedral City, CA

The Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic will begin on Thursday, Feb. 19 and end Sunday, Feb. 22. Games will take place on various fields at the Big League Dreams complex in Cathedral City, CA.

Thurs., Feb. 19

MatchupTime (ET)TV/Live stream
Wrigley Field
Oregon vs. Auburn1 p.m.FloCollege
Oregon vs. Texas A&M3:30 p.m.FloCollege
UCLA vs. Auburn6 p.m.FloCollege
Oklahoma vs. Fullerton8:30 p.m.FloCollege
Oklahoma vs. San Diego State11 p.m.FloCollege
Yankee Field
Bethune Cookman vs. Utah1:30 p.m.FloCollege
South Carolina vs. Washington4 p.m.FloCollege
Texas Tech vs. Fresno State6:30 p.m.FloCollege
Texas Tech vs. Team Japan9 p.m.FloCollege
UC Riverside vs. Team Japan11:30 p.m.FloCollege
Fenway Field
Oregon State vs. CBU1 p.m.FloCollege
Oregon State vs. Nevada3:30 p.m.FloCollege
Rutgers vs. Bethune Cookman4 p.m.FloCollege
Duke vs. Texas A&M8:30 p.m.FloCollege
Rutgers vs. Fullerton11 p.m.FloCollege
Des Moines Field
California vs. UC San Diego1 p.m.FloCollege
CBU vs. UC San Diego3:30 p.m.FloCollege
CSun vs. BYU4 p.m.FloCollege
Hawaii vs. BYU8:30 p.m.FloCollege
Hawaii vs. Duke11 p.m.FloCollege

Friday, Feb. 20

MatchupTime (ET)TV/Live stream
Wrigley Field
Texas Tech vs. Bethune Cookman11:30 p.m.FloCollege
Oklahoma vs. Duke4 p.m.FloCollege
UCLA vs. Nevada6:30 p.m.FloCollege
UCLA vs. Duke9 p.m.FloCollege
Texas A&M vs. UC San Diego11:30 p.m.FloCollege
Yankee Field
Fresno State vs. California1 p.m.FloCollege
Nevada vs. California3:30 p.m.FloCollege
San Diego State vs. UC Riverside6 p.m.FloCollege
San Diego State vs. Saint Mary's8:30 p.m.FloCollege
Washington vs. Saint Mary's11 p.m.FloCollege
Fenway Field
Nebraska vs. South Carolina1 p.m.FloCollege
Nebraska vs. Hawaii3:30 p.m.FloCollege
South Carolina vs. Oregon6 p.m.FloCollege
Fullerton vs. Oregon8:30 p.m.FloCollege
Auburn vs. BYU11 p.m.FloCollege
Des Moines Field
Seattle vs. CBU1 p.m.FloCollege
Seattle vs. CSun1:30 p.m.FloCollege
Utah vs. CSun6 p.m.FloCollege
Hawaii vs. Oregon State8:30 p.m.FloCollege
Pawtucket Field
Fresno State vs. CBY3:30 p.m.FloCollege
BYU vs. Long Beach State6 p.m.FloCollege
LMU vs. Rutgers8:30 p.m.FloCollege
Utah vs. Rutgers11 p.m.FloCollege

Saturday, Feb. 21

MatchupTime (ET)TV/Live stream
Wrigley Field
Long Beach State vs. Oklahoma1 p.m.FloCollege
California vs. Oklahoma3:30 p.m.FloCollege
UCLA vs. Fresno State6 p.m.FloCollege
UCLA vs. South Carolina8:30 p.m.FloCollege
Saint Mary's vs. South Carolina11 p.m.FloCollege
Yankee Field
San Diego State vs. Seattle12:30 p.m.FloCollege
Fullerton vs. Texas Tech3 p.m.FloCollege
San Diego State vs. Texas Tech5:30 p.m.FloCollege
Texas A&M vs. Nebraska8 p.m.FloCollege
Texas A&M vs. LMU10:30 p.m.FloCollege
Fenway Field
Duke vs. Oregon12:30 p.m.FloCollege
Auburn vs. Washington3 p.m.FloCollege
Auburn vs. Fullerton5:30 p.m.FloCollege
LMU vs. Utah8 p.m.FloCollege
CBU vs. Utah10:30 p.m.FloCollege
Des Moines Field
Nevada vs. UC Riverside1 p.m.FloCollege
UC San Diego vs. Seattle3:30 p.m.FloCollege
BYU vs. Washington6 p.m.FloCollege
Team Japan vs. Rutgers8:30 p.m.FloCollege
Team Japan vs. Hawaii11 p.m.FloCollege
Pawtucket Field
Bethune Cookman vs. Oregon State12:30 p.m.FloCollege
CSun vs. Oregon State3 p.m.FloCollege
Long Beach State vs. Bethune Cookman5:30 p.m.FloCollege
Saint Mary's vs. Hawaii8 p.m.FloCollege
Rutgers vs. UC San Diego11 p.m.FloCollege

Sunday, Feb. 22

MatchupTime (ET)TV/Live stream
Wrigley Field
Washington vs. OklahomaNoonFloCollege
UCLA vs. Texas A&M2:30 p.m.FloCollege
Team Japan vs. KMU5 p.m.FloCollege
Yankee Field
Seattle vs. NebraskaNoonFloCollege
California vs. Nebraska2:30 p.m.FloCollege
Fenway Field
UC Riverside vs. Texas TechNoonFloCollege
Washington vs. LMU2:30 p.m.FloCollege
Des Moines Field
California vs. AuburnNoonFloCollege
Utah vs. UC Riverwide2:30 p.m.FloCollege
Pawtucket Field
Oregon State vs. Long Beach StateNoonFloCollege
Saint Mary's vs. Long Beach State2:30 p.m.FloCollege

NCAA softball rankings (ESPN.com/USA Softball poll)

Teams participating in the Mary Nutter Collegiate Classic are in bold.

  1. Tennessee
  2. Texas Tech
  3. Texas
  4. Oklahoma
  5. Florida
  6. Nebraska
  7. Florida State
  8. Arkansas
  9. Alabama
  10. Stanford
  11. UCLA
  12. Georgia
  13. Texas A&M
  14. Oregon
  15. Duke
  16. Arizona
  17. LSU
  18. Mississippi State
  19. Oklahoma State
  20. Virginia Tech
  21. Arizona State
  22. South Carolina
  23. Washington
  24. Clemson
  25. Virginia

Oliveira Ready For Holloway Point: ‘I’m Hunting The Whole Time’

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - DECEMBER 05: (L-R) Opponents Max Holloway and Charles Oliveira face off during the UFC It's On Seasonal Press Conference at T-Mobile Arena on December 05, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)

UFC 326 headliner Charles Oliveira vs. Max Holloway 2 is one of the most highly anticipated fights of 2026.

Not only is the BMF title back on the line, but this is a rematch 11 years in the making! Since the first fight ended early due to mysterious injury all those years ago, both men have accomplished incredible things inside the Octagon, winning and defending divisional titles. Instead of a clash of rising talents, it’s now a dual of former champions, two men who are proven to push the pace and gun for the finish even at the most elite level.

One of the changes since the first bout is Holloway now has a signature move. He first pointed to the floor and gave his opponent a chance to trade in 2016 versus Ricardo Lamas, but his point down and subsequent KO of Justin Gaethje was the real moment where it turned iconic. Since then, dozens and dozens of fighters — in the UFC or otherwise — have impersonated the “Blessed” point down, but nobody can do it quite like the original.

How will Oliveira react if and when Holloway invites him to engage? Per the Brazilian, he’s ready to throw down at literally any time and will happily take that offer.

“If he calls me at the beginning of the round or in the middle of the round, it doesn’t matter,” Oliveira told RMC Sport Combat (h/t ChampRds). “I’ll be there. Like I just said, that’s why I break people mentally. I don’t run from a fight, I seek it out. I’m hunting the whole time. It makes no difference to me.”

Does anyone have any doubts that “Do Bronx” will live up to his word? He fights fearlessly. However, that might not be the best idea against such a sharper boxer like Holloway. Oliveira denounced his aggression and lack of strategy after the Ilia Topuria knockout loss (watch here), but it sounds like the lesson may not have fully sunk in.

We’ll find out in just a few more weeks if Oliveira’s gamble is a good idea.

Thursday’s Everton News: Senesi, David and Wilson updates, Alcaraz awe

Carlos Alcaraz - Getty Images | CameraSport via Getty Images

Your daily dose of Everton news and rumours

An exclusive sit-down interview with Charly Alcaraz that reflects on his first goal and the goosebumps that he gets when he hears Evertonians singing his song. [Everton FC]

Everton scouts have been spotted tracking Canadian striker for Belgian Pro League club Union SG Promise David, with the Blues in the race against Wolverhampton Wanderers to secure his signature. [Sports Boom]

Just to keep you updated; the FAB held a meeting with the Club last week, to put our case to its senior leadership. They have committed to consider our proposals, based on views received from fans, and come back to us. We will keep fans informed as soon as we have news to share. https://t.co/KOX8tJAR6H

— EFC_FanAdvisoryBoard (@EFC_FanAdvisory) February 18, 2026

Former Everton captain Alan Stubbs has been discussing the prospect of on-loan Manchester City star Jack Grealish returning to Hill Dickinson Stadium next season. [Liverpool Echo]

West Ham ‘in race’ for Harry Wilson after Everton made ‘cheeky enquiry’ in January. [London World]

A magical Merseyside showdown takes place this weekend as Everton Women travel to St Helens Stadium to face Liverpool in The Adobe Women’s FA Cup. [Everton FC]

Everton have 13 big contract decisions to consider ahead of another summer of change. [Liverpool Echo]

🎶 Oviedo Baby! 🇨🇷

Happy birthday, @Bryan_Oviedo! 💙 pic.twitter.com/mXngZd9qY1

— Everton (@Everton) February 18, 2026

Would European football next season be good for Everton or a step too far, too soon? [Liverpool Echo]

The calls for David Moyes to be replaced are out there. Is this the time? [ToffeeWeb]

Everton 5-0 Norwich in the FA Cup at Goodison #OnThisDay 1995, goals from @Anders_Limpar@Josephparkins18 Paul Rideout, Duncan Ferguson & Graham Stuart. On the way to winning the cup at Wembley in May. #UTFT#EFCpic.twitter.com/WMj063Vslf

— Bluekipper.com (@bluekippercom) February 18, 2026

Bournemouth star Marcos Senesi has had his head turned by interest from Barcelona, despite Tottenham, Everton and several other Premier League sides also being keen on signing him. [TeamTalk]

Everton are not interested in considering a sale of Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall amid Tottenham’s interest, as they see him as a key part of their plans. [Football Insider]

Accrington Stanley boss John Doolan has hailed Everton loanee Isaac Heath for his key assist on Tuesday night against Tranmere Rovers, pointing out the ‘magic’ he has. [Inside Futbol]

What to Watch

UEFA Europa League and Conference League playoffs begin.

Full schedule of games here.

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Could Paul Wanner be on his way back to Bayern Munich?

VOLENDAM, NETHERLANDS - FEBRUARY 13: Paul Wanner of PSV during the Dutch Eredivisie match between FC Volendam v PSV at the Kras Stadium on February 13, 2026 in Volendam Netherlands (Photo by Photo Prestige/Soccrates/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Over the summer, Bayern Munich sold its once-prized prospect, Paul Wanner, to PSV Eindhoven in a move that represented closure to a puzzling few years for the attacker.

At one point, Wanner had both clubs and countries clamoring over him, but his star faded after an unsuccessful loan stint at Heidenheim. According to transfer journalist Ekrem Konur, Wanner could be angling for a return to Bavaria after a recent surge:

🚨 #FCBayern Paul Wanner – ready for Bayern return!

📌 PSV’s 20‑year‑old midfielder is prepared to rejoin Bayern Munich.

🔥 German giants hold a buy‑back option.

Wanner got off to a rough start with PSV Eindhoven, but has made steady improvements. Overall, Wanner has four goals and two assists this season, while tallying 1,520 minutes in 23 games across all competitions.

There is no word on what the buy-back fee would be, but the Dutch power just paid €15 million for him last summer.

BFW Analysis

This seems…doubtful. It is unclear where Wanner would fit on the roster as Lennart Karl has usurped the role that seemed destined for Wanner. With an attacking group that is expected to be loaded for next season, Wanner would not get more minutes (if any) at Bayern Munich next season barring some wild and unexpected exit of a star player from the roster.

It is not impossible, but it seems very unlikely.


If you are looking for more Bayern Munich and German national team coverage, check out the latest episodes of Bavarian Podcast Works, which you can get on Acast, Spotify, Apple, or any leading podcast distributor…

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Your Matchday Guide: Celtic v VfB Stuttgart

Your Matchday Guide: Celtic v VfB Stuttgart
Your Matchday Guide: Celtic v VfB Stuttgart

Paradise will host another special European night under the lights as they welcome Bundesliga side, VfB Stuttgart, in the UEFA Europa League knockout play-off round tonight (Thursday, February 19, KO: 8pm).

Martin O’Neill’s side will be looking to continue their unbeaten run and take a positive result over to Germany for the second leg next week.

You can find out everything you need to know ahead of the fixture below.

EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT MATCHDAYS AT CELTIC PARK

You’ll find all the important matchday timings and safety information ahead of today’s match on our dedicated Matchday Information page on celticfc.com.

MATCHDAY INFORMATION

FIRST TIME AT PARADISE?

If you’re a first-time visitor to Celtic Park, or if it’s just been a while since your last match, please take a look at our first-time fans page for all the helpful information you need to make your evening go smoothly.

First-time Fans

9AM: SUPERSTORE OPENS

The Superstore at Celtic Park will be open from 9am-10:30pm for supporters looking to pick up some matchday essentials.

Enjoy fantastic savings on all three kits in-store tonight. The Home, Away and Third kits are all reduced, with prices starting at just £30. With any new kit purchased, you can enjoy free shirt printing of your favourite Celtic star, or opt for your own name on the back of the iconic top!

11AM: TICKET OFFICE OPENS

The Ticket Office will be open from 11am until kick-off at 8pm to assist supporters on matchday. Final remaining tickets for this fixture are available now with the print at home option.

Buy tickets

4PM: SPORTS BAR OPENS

The Sports Bar at Celtic Park will open from 4pm to supporters with a valid match ticket. Please see the Sports Bar page for all the information you need.

After the game, head back to The Sports Bar to enjoy a drink until 11pm.

6:30PM: STADIUM OPENS – PLEASE ENTER VIA CORRECT TURNSTILE

The stadium will open from 6:30pm. Supporters are reminded to enter the stadium at the turnstile location shown on your ticket to access your allocated seat. Additional concourse ticket checks will be in place to ensure adherence.

SAFETY INFORMATION

Please familiarise yourself with all the important safety information on the Matchday page.

THE OFFICIAL CELTIC APP

Get even closer on matchday with the brand-new Official Celtic FC App.

Keep connected in real-time with official team news before kick-off, plus all the reaction and highlights from Thursday night’s contest on your phone.

Download the Official Celtic FC App for free today on the App Store or Google Play Store.

Download now

MATCH PROGRAMME

Pick up a copy of the Match Programme for Celtic v VfB Stuttgart, packed full of news, exclusive interviews and fantastic features.

Programmes are priced £4 and you’ll find our programme sellers around the stadium on arrival at Celtic Park.

PARADISE WINDFALL £15K JACKPOT

Make your evening one to remember with a massive £15,000 up for grabs in the Paradise Windfall Superdraw!

Supporters have the chance to win £15,000 in Celtic Pools’ famous half-time draw, sponsored by Howden.

Paradise Windfall tickets cost £2 and are available from sellers at the stadium ahead of kick-off, or alternatively via the Celtic Pools App.

Download the app

Players must be aged over 18 years. Celtic Development Pools Ltd is licensed and regulated by the Gambling Commission.

CASHLESS FOOD & BEVERAGE KIOSKS

Please note that the food and drink kiosks in the concourse areas are now fully cashless – meaning our kiosks can only accept contactless payment methods.

8PM: KICK-OFF

Be in your seat for kick-off as the Bhoys look to create more memories in Europe and take advantage in the tie.

Make the most of your matchday experience at Celtic Park and arrive early for the UEFA Europa League match against VfB Stuttgart, Thursday, February 19 (KO: 8pm).

Upcoming Fixtures

Celtic Vs. VfB Stuttgart 1893 AG - Thu, Feb 2nd 2026, 20:00 Match Information | Buy Tickets | Buy Hospitality

From Stoke to the Arctic Circle - 30 years of BBC's Murray behind mic

BBC commentator John Murray
John Murray at the 2022 World Cup in Qatar [BBC Sport]

From the Leaning Tower of Pisa and Christ the Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro, to the Arctic Circle and numerous World Cups, John Murray has seen it all during three decades behind the microphone for the BBC.

The Radio 5 Live commentator, 59, has attended more than 200 stadiums while narrating some of the biggest football matches across the globe since joining the organisation in 1994.

Before Newcastle's Champions League match against Qarabag on Wednesday, the Northumberland native sat against the picturesque backdrop of the Azersun Arena in Azerbaijan - more than 2,500 miles away from home - to reflect on a career that has taken him to five continents.

"When I was growing up, listening to the radio and watching television, it was really commentary to matches in far flung places that captured my imagination," explains Murray.

"I always remember those European matches because in those days - we're talking 1970s, early 1980s - it was quite a rarity that those matches would be shown live on television.

"Access to those matches on the radio - and international matches as well - were a big part of what really fired my imagination."

Before he joined the BBC, Murray's first taste of life in the gantry came on a "raucous" night at Stoke City's Victoria Ground when he was "thrust" on air while working for local Teesside station TFM Radio.

He later travelled to Pisa to cover Middlesbrough's Anglo-Italian Cup match against the Serie B side as he continued to hone his craft as a budding broadcaster.

"It must have been my first game abroad and the stadium there was right next to the Leaning Tower of Pisa," he recalls.

"That was a fantastic way to start - you can't get any better than your first [European] commentary next to a World Heritage site.

"There were only a couple of hundred people at the ground, but right outside is the Leaning Tower of Pisa."

'How are we here for a Champions League match?'

Even after covering matches across Asia, Africa, North America, South America and Europe, each season still manages to spring something new on Murray.

In January, he found himself surrounded by "snow-capped mountains" on a historic night inside the Arctic Circle as Norwegian minnows Bodo/Glimt stunned Manchester City in the Champions League.

Murray regards it as one of the most surreal nights of his career, likening the landscape to the 1983 Bill Forsyth film Local Hero, which was set in Scotland.

"I could see rooftops with snow on them from just outside the ground. It was such an unusual place," he says.

"As I said at the time on the radio, it just had the feel of the film 'Local Hero'. I was thinking, how are we here for a Champions League match?

"And not only that, but it helps when you get a match that is a real event. For them to beat Manchester City, Champions League winners only a few years ago, in the way that they did, that is part of package.

"When you get the match, as well as the setting, to describe as well. There weren't many better examples than that."

But it was much closer to home that Murray encountered what he described as the most "challenging" 90 minutes of his broadcasting career.

In January 2021, eighth-tier Marine hosted Tottenham in the FA Cup third round.

Ongoing Covid-19 restrictions meant matches were played behind closed doors, with broadcasters, journalists and a small number of other media personnel spread around the ground to adhere to social distancing guidelines.

For the first time, Murray was forced to commentate from behind the goal rather than his usual position along the touchline.

"I was really uncomfortable about that because it just didn't feel right," he admits.

"Normally I'm side on, the teams are playing left to right, right to left. There I was commentating with one team coming at you and the other team going away from you.

"It's not an experience I'd particularity want to repeat again."

'There is nothing like an FA Cup upset'

It was only a few weeks ago that Murray was prompted to reflect on his remarkable career when a colleague asked how many stadiums he had visited.

After revisiting the question during this interview, the self-proclaimed "stadium geek" settled on an answer of "more than 200".

"I don't know how I'd work out how many it is. During the course of that, I've probably seen a little bit of everything," he says.

During that time, Murray has commentated on World Cups in South Korea, South Africa, Brazil and Qatar. Yet it is the FA Cup he holds in the highest regard.

Murray made his FA Cup final commentary debut in 2010 when Premier League champions Chelsea beat Portsmouth at Wembley Stadium to secure a first domestic Double.

But it is the competition's early rounds that continue to rouse him - most recently when he covered non-league Macclesfield's upset of holders Crystal Palace.

"It was a match that had so many of the ingredients that you would want for a cup upset," he adds. "There is nothing like that.

"For all the World Cup finals, internationals and Champions League finals, there is still nothing like being there and experiencing an FA Cup upset like that. That was one of the biggest."

Messi, Mbappe and a World Cup final full of drama

Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe shake hands
Lionel Messi helped Argentina defeat France at the 2022 World Cup final [Getty Images]

So after thousands of matches in hundreds of different stadiums across the world, which game ranks as Murray's favourite?

"Easy question," he says with a smile. "It was always a difficult question until the 2022 World Cup final - that was an amazing match to be at.

"But because it was the World Cup final and Lionel Messi was involved, Kylian Mbappe was involved, the to and fro of the game, the drama and excitement.

"That is the one I'd pick out, which is a really boring, easy answer. Yes it was a World Cup final, but it was the best spectacle."

‘Heated Rivalry’ at Winter Olympics? What to know about USA, Canada hockey stars breakup before gold medal game

‘Heated Rivalry’ at Winter Olympics? What to know about USA, Canada hockey stars breakup before gold medal game originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Caroline Harvey has taken the 2026 Winter Olympics by storm, serving as the high-octane engine propelling Team USA toward the gold-medal game. After being the least-used skater on the roster and seeing significant bench time during the 2022 Beijing Games, Harvey has returned to Milan not just as a starter but as one of the tournament’s most dominant forces.

The 23-year-old defender currently leads the United States -- and the entire Olympic field -- in scoring with nine points (two goals, seven assists). Her offensive flair is backed by a historic defensive effort: The Americans have outscored their opponents 31-1 and are riding a five-game shutout streak that has shattered Olympic records.

Now, only one obstacle remains between Harvey and the top of the podium: the archrival Canadians. For Harvey, the matchup carries an added layer of intrigue. Social media has been filled with rumors that Harvey and Canadian forward Daryl Watts — who were reportedly dating — have split mid-tournament. The speculation intensified following a TikTok Live with teammate Laila Edwards, during which Harvey was referred to as single, and fans noticed the deletion of photos from her social media accounts.

The unexpected off-ice storyline has led some fans to compare the final to a real-life episode of the HBO series "Heated Rivalry," with the two former partners potentially set to clash on the world’s biggest stage. For Harvey, the game represents the final step in a four-year transformation from a little-used teenager to a centerpiece of the American lineup, with a high-stakes showdown against her rival — and rumored ex — standing in the way.

Here’s more on the rumored breakup involving Team USA’s star.

MORE 2026 OLYMPICS: Live medal tracker | Viewer's guide | Day-by-day schedule

Caroline Harvey-Daryl Watts breakup

While the gold medal game between the U.S. and Canada is always a powder keg, a flurry of social media activity has added a surprisingly personal layer of tension to the 2026 final.

Rumors of a mid-tournament breakup between American defender Caroline Harvey and Canadian forward Daryl Watts began circulating after Harvey posted a TikTok on February 15 to a song titled "F**k Valentines."

The speculation intensified when teammate Laila Edwards commented, "Single and ready to mingle! or whatever they say," a remark fans quickly interpreted as a change in Harvey’s relationship status. Team USA's Tessa Janicke also commented, saying "There it is."

The situation moved from rumor to widely accepted fact following a TikTok Live from the Olympic Village, where Edwards was reportedly heard explicitly confirming that Harvey is single. This digital paper trail, combined with fans noticing that Harvey had scrubbed photos featuring Watts from her Instagram, has turned the Milano Santagiulia Arena into a focal point.

MORE: USA-Canada complete rivalry history

When did Caroline Harvey and Daryl Watts break up?

Neither player has officially confirmed they were in a relationship or that a breakup occurred, but the rumors of their split began circulating on February 17, 2026.

The speculation reached its peak less than 48 hours before the gold medal game between the U.S. and Canada. During a TikTok Live from the Olympic Village, Edwards reportedly answered a viewer's question by explicitly stating, "Yes, Caroline is single."

Around the same time, internet sleuths noticed that Harvey had deleted several photos from her Instagram that featured Watts, a move many took as definitive proof of a split.

MOREUpdated results for 2026 Women's Olympic Ice Hockey

Who is Caroline Harvey?

Harvey is the premier defenseman for Team USA and arguably the most dominant skater at the 2026 Winter Olympics in Milan. Currently a star for the University of Wisconsin Badgers, she has translated her collegiate success to the international stage by leading the entire Olympic tournament in scoring with 9 points.

THAT A WAY, GIRLS. 🗣️ Caroline Harvey was READY for Team USA's #WinterOlympics semifinal. pic.twitter.com/OTRmDY6Asc

— On Her Turf (@OnHerTurf) February 16, 2026

Harvey has evolved into the engine of the American roster, serving as a dual-threat blue-liner who anchors the team's historic defense while quarterbacking their high-octane offense. Her standout moment of the Games came during the preliminary round, where she scored a the first goal against Canada to in a 5-0 victory, tallying three points on the day. 

As she prepares for a rematch against the Canadians in the gold medal game, Harvey stands as the centerpiece of a U.S. squad that has outscored opponents 31-1. Her journey from being a benched teenager at the 2022 Beijing Games to the top-scoring defenseman in the world has made her the face of the American pursuit of gold.

MORE2026 Women's Ice Hockey standings

What team does Caroline Harvey play for?

Harvey currently plays for the University of Wisconsin Badgers, where she has established herself as one of the most prolific defenders in the history of NCAA women's hockey.

While she has taken the 2026 Olympics by storm — leading the tournament in scoring and netting a clutch goal against Canada in the prelims — her collegiate resume is equally historic. As a two-time National Champion (2023, 2025), she has rewritten the record books for blueliners.

In the 2024-25 season, Harvey recorded 63 points (18 goals, 45 assists), the most points by a defenseman in a single season in Wisconsin history. During her junior year, she became Wisconsin's all-time leading scorer among defensemen, surpassing the previous career mark of 137 points.

In November 2025, she became the all-time leading scorer among WCHA defenders, eclipsing the long-standing record of 168 points held by Minnesota’s Ronda Curtin. She currently ranks second all-time in NCAA history for defensive scoring, trailing only Hall of Famer Angela Ruggiero.

Harvey was tearing it up in the NCAA this season too. Before leaving for the Milan Olympics, Harvey was leading all NCAA defenders with 54 points in just 26 games.

MORE: How 'Free Bird' became USA hockey's goal song

Who is Daryl Watts?

Watts is a star forward for Team Canada and one of the most prolific offensive threats in the history of women’s hockey. Like her American rival Caroline Harvey, Watts is a University of Wisconsin alumna, where she famously scored the overtime goal to win the 2021 National Championship for the Badgers.

Goal #1 in the books for Daryl Watts at #WomensWorlds 🚨 @hockeycanadapic.twitter.com/cjxz8przaI

— IIHF (@IIHFHockey) April 11, 2025

In Milan, Watts has been the primary engine for Canada’s offense. She currently has 8 points in the tournament, placing her just one point behind Harvey for the overall lead. Her performance has been surgical, including a multi-point game in the quarterfinals to set up the gold medal showdown.

What team does Daryl Watts play for?

Watts currently plays professionally for the Toronto Sceptres in the PWHL. Before joining the Sceptres, she made history as the highest-paid player in professional women's hockey during her time in the PHF and has consistently been a top-three scorer in every league she has entered.

Her collegiate career was split between Boston College and the University of Wisconsin. In 2018, she became the first freshman in NCAA history to win the Patty Kazmaier Memorial Award. She finished her college career with 297 points, ranking her second all-time in NCAA history.

At Wisconsin, she set the program record for assists in a single season (49) and maintains the highest career points-per-game average (1.76) in Badgers history.

Beyond her stats, she is remembered in Madison for her "frozen throne" moment — scoring the 2021 National Championship-winning goal in overtime against Northeastern.

MORE: Day-by-day TV, streaming schedule for 2026 Winter Olympics

How old is Hilary Knight? Age and career timeline, from first Olympics to 2026 Winter Games

How old is Hilary Knight? Age and career timeline, from first Olympics to 2026 Winter Games originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The United States women's hockey team is just one win away from securing a gold medal in the 2026 Winter Olympic games. The U.S. women defeated Sweden on Monday and now await Canada for another gold medal showdown. 

Hoping to win its first gold medal since 2018, the women will rely on the veteran experience of Team USA forward Hilary Knight. Knight has five Olympic seasons under her belt, as well as over a decade of international play. 

Let's take a deeper look at Knight's Olympics history, and all she's done with Team USA hockey. 

MORE:Full guide to USA vs. Canada women's hockey rivalry

How old is Hilary Knight? 

Knight is 36 years old, born in Sun Valley, Idaho before her family moved to Illinois and she started getting interested in hockey. Knight had Olympic dreams as a young girl. According to the Eye on Sun Valley, Knight wanted to go to the Olympics as early as five years old: 

“She put her puck under her pillow when she was 5 and told her grandmother, ‘I’m going to the Olympics.’ And she wrote a book in second grade about a little girl with a magical hockey stick who went to the Olympics,” said Cynthia. “That, of course, was her.”

Hilary watched National Hockey League players on TV, trying to emulate their hand and feet work. The Knight kids played rough and tumble shinny—or pick-up hockey—in the long hallway in their home. And Hilary filled their garage with difficult challenges and targets, such as a triangle, to hone her puck control. 

Knight played collegiate hockey at Wisconsin from 2007-2012 before her professional hockey career began with the Boston Blades. She has played 15 seasons of professional hockey, with various leagues like the CWHL, NWHL and PWHL. She's been with Boston teams the longest and currently plays for the Seattle Torrent. 

MORE:Where does Hilary Knight rank among the most Olympic goals ever?

How many Olympic medals has Hilary Knight won? 

Hilary Knight has won four medals in all four of her Olympics she has appeared in, starting in the 2010 Vancouver Winter Games. She has three silver medals from the 2010, 2014 and 2022 Olympics and won gold with Team USA in 2018 in Pyeongchang. The Olympic gold medal was the first for women's hockey in 20 years, as the U.S. defeated Canada 3-2 in a shootout. 

Olympic GamesMedal Won
2010 VancouverSilver
2014 SochiSilver
2018 PyeongchangGold
2022 BeijingSilver
2026 MilanTBD

Outside of Olympic play, Knight has another 15 medals from World Championships, including 10 gold medals and five silvers.

MORE:What to know about Olympic hockey rules

Hilary Knight Olympic stats

Hilary Knight's 2022 Olympic Games in Beijing were her best yet, scoring six goals with four assists over seven games. So far during the 2026 games in Milan, she has two goals. 

YEAREVENTGPGAPTS
2022Winter Olympics76410
2018Winter Olympics5213
2014Winter Olympics5336
2010Winter Olympics5178

MORE:Is fighting allowed in the Olympics?

Hilary Knight Team USA records

Hilary Knight holds several Team USA records over her decorated Olympic career. During the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, she scored 53 seconds into Team USA's first-round game against Finland, which was a record fastest goal.

During the 2022 Olympics in Beijing, she set the record for 22 career games in the Olympics, and has surpassed that with 27 career games so far in Milan. She is currently tied for first place with 32 points in the Olympics, joining fellow Team USA legend Jenny Potter just this year.

Even before he United States takes the ice vs. Canada, Knight will become the first U.S. ice hockey player to win five Olympic medals. One more goal in the final would make her the all-time leading goal scorer in history, and an assist would make her the all-time points leader outright.

MORE:How does overtime work in the Olympics?

Coutinho says he is “mentally exhausted” as he confirms Vasco departure

Coutinho says he is “mentally exhausted” as he confirms Vasco departure
Coutinho says he is “mentally exhausted” as he confirms Vasco departure

Philippe Coutinho has confirmed he is stepping away from Vasco da Gama after publishing a deeply personal statement on Instagram.

The 33-year-old Brazilian explained that he reached a point where he needed to prioritise his mental health.

Coutinho wrote: “I thought long and hard before writing this… out of respect, affection, and love that I have for you and for this club, I felt I needed to come here and speak from the heart.”

The former Liverpool midfielder added: “At that moment, on my way to the locker room, I felt and realized that my time at the club was over, and I didn’t return to prioritize my mental health.”

Coutinho also said: “The truth is, I’m very mentally exhausted.”

This is a reminder that the player who once lit up Anfield with his right-footed curlers, has been navigating a very different chapter back in Brazil.

Coutinho’s statement explains why he is leaving Vasco

Coutinho’s message repeatedly returned to the idea of respect, both for the club and for the supporters who questioned what had happened.

Our former No.10 insisted: “Being judged by countless people for something that isn’t part of my character and is extremely difficult.”

He stressed that his relationship with Vasco remains strong, saying: “My relationship with Vasco is one of love. And it will continue to be forever.”

It all points to a personal decision rather than a football-only one, and it’s not difficult to see why he described the situation as painful.

Coutinho’s Vasco numbers show he was a key contributor last year

(Photo by Jan Kruger/Getty Images)

On the pitch, Sofascore data paints a clear picture of a player who carried responsibility in 2025 and then had a much smaller sample in 2026.

Those 2025 figures suggest Coutinho was regularly involved and productive, even if the output was not at the outrageous level we saw in his best Liverpool seasons.

It is also worth remembering what the little magician represented for us statistically, because his Liverpool record remains substantial: 201 appearances, 54 goals and 43 assists in all competitions, with 152 league games producing 41 goals and 35 assists.

We saw the outpouring of love from Liverpool when this move to Vasco was confirmed and it’s sad to see this come to such an exhausting end.

We will all still associate Philippe Coutinho with a very specific type of footballer: a technical playmaker who could decide matches with one moment, with Vladimir Smicer stating Florian Wirtz reminds him of our former player.

At the end of the day though, the wellbeing of a former player is the only detail that really matters in this update.

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Scout reveals that £60m Liverpool signing almost joined PSG

Scout reveals that £60m Liverpool signing almost joined PSG
Scout reveals that £60m Liverpool signing almost joined PSG

Liverpool Agree Jeremy Jacquet Deal After PSG Hesitation

Liverpool have moved decisively in the market, agreeing a £60 million deal for highly rated defender Jeremy Jacquet, a player who was once closely assessed by PSG before slipping through their recruitment net. The France youth international has emerged as one of Europe’s most promising centre backs, and his expected arrival at Anfield under Arne Slot reflects Liverpool’s long term planning following their Premier League success in 2024/25.

Jacquet’s journey has not followed a straightforward path. While he is now widely regarded as a leading defensive prospect, PSG previously had reservations about his development when he was younger. Those early doubts contrast sharply with the form he has shown at Rennes this season, where his performances have attracted attention across Europe.

PSG scouting decision that shaped Jeremy Jacquet’s rise

As a teenager, Jeremy Jacquet trained within elite academy environments and drew interest from PSG scouts. However, their technical evaluation raised questions at the time. A former PSG scout told La Parisien: “PSG hesitated between him and Sékou Doucouré, whose profile was more in line with the club’s vision for the future.

“Jacquet had talent, but he seemed less technically ready.”

Photo: IMAGO

That decision ultimately proved significant. Doucouré did not progress into the PSG first team picture and later moved on, while Jacquet continued to refine his game elsewhere. The episode highlights how youth recruitment often involves calculated risks, particularly when assessing players at such an early stage of development.

Liverpool planning around Arne Slot’s defensive rebuild

Liverpool’s interest accelerated as Jacquet matured physically and tactically. Standing at 6’4″, he has developed into a commanding aerial presence and currently ranks among Europe’s most effective defenders in aerial duel success rate, sitting just behind Virgil van Dijk in key metrics.

Slot’s system places strong emphasis on defenders who can carry the ball confidently and distribute under pressure. Jacquet’s improved passing range and composure in possession have made him a natural fit for Liverpool’s evolving style. The club expect him to join after completing rehabilitation from shoulder surgery, which has limited his appearances during the latter stages of his time in France.

Recruitment staff at Liverpool believe the French defender’s trajectory mirrors the club’s philosophy of identifying players before they reach their peak value. His progression at Rennes has reinforced the view that early PSG doubts centred more on timing than long term ability.

Potential PSG and Liverpool Champions League rematch

There is added intrigue surrounding Jacquet’s move given Liverpool’s recent Champions League encounters with PSG. Last season’s knockout clash produced one of the tightest ties of the competition, despite arriving earlier than many anticipated. Observers felt Liverpool provided PSG with one of their sternest challenges on the road to European success.

This season, PSG remain a formidable opponent, though performances have suggested vulnerabilities, particularly during their play off tie against Monaco. Should the clubs meet again later in the competition, Jacquet’s impending switch to Liverpool would add another narrative layer to an already compelling rivalry.

Liverpool supporters will view the signing as a statement of intent. PSG’s earlier hesitation now reads as a missed opportunity, while Liverpool appear poised to benefit from a defender who has grown rapidly into one of France’s most talked about young talents.

Allegri and Fabregas in huge Serie A bust-up: "You're such an idiot" 🤬

Allegri and Fabregas in huge Serie A bust-up:
Allegri and Fabregas in huge Serie A bust-up: "You're such an idiot" 🤬

Good vibes in Serie A.

On Wednesday night, everyone had their eyes glued to the Champions League. Yet, Serie A treated us to a great match between AC Milan and Como (1-1) at the same time.

While the game was marked by mistakes from the French goalkeepers, Mike Maignan and Jean Butez, it also became the scene of an unlikely clash between Max Allegri and Cesc Fabregas.

The reason? Just over ten minutes before the end of the match, the Spanish coach was guilty of pulling Alexis Saelemaekers' shirt, preventing him from getting back into position.

This gesture made Allegri lose his cool, and he didn’t hesitate to go and confront Como’s coach.

Faced with this tense moment, the referee decided to take action by giving a red card to... Max Allegri. Cesc Fabregas, for his part, got away without so much as a warning.

A scenario of wild injustice in the eyes of the AC Milan coach, who didn’t hesitate to verbally lash out at the former Arsenal player just before the press conference.

"You’re a big idiot.You’re a kid who started coaching yesterday," the former Juventus coach reportedly said, according to various media present at the scene.

For his part, Cesc Fabregas expressed regret for his action in front of the Italian journalists. "I want to apologize. Today I did something I’m not proud of; I made an unsportsmanlike gesture. I was so excited that I touched the ball; my hands should have stayed at home, as Chivu said the other day. Especially as a coach, I recognize that we can’t allow ourselves to do that. I hope I never do it again," he declared.

Between this new incident, the Kalulu controversy, and the bizarre red card given to Gift Orban, Italian football is certainly going through some eventful times.

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇫🇷 here.

The concerning Six Nations trend that Scotland must address against Wales

Wales face an uphill task against Scotland (Getty Images)

It was a message of triumph, but it came with a warning. “I’ve been on this journey now for four or five years with this team and I take the last week as a low moment for myself, but I’ve also had some massive highs, and this is one of them,” said Scotland captain Sione Tuipulotu almost immediately after a win over England that changed the narrative around his side. “But I really want this to be the growth now, us to show our growth next week to back up this performance in a stadium that we’ve had troubles in over the last 20 years.”

Tuipulotu had not long got his hands on the Calcutta Cup, a prize with which Scottish skippers have been rather familiar of late, and already he was setting a new challenge for his side, referencing an unwelcome record. Too often, highs against England under Gregor Townsend have been followed by a level below; one step forward, two back, too often. It is a trend that extends beyond even the Townsend tenure – in all, Scotland have beaten the Auld Enemy seven times since 2001, and lost their next match on six occasions. Add in the factor of Cardiff, a city in which Scots have only won twice this century, and Tuipulotu’s trepidation was entirely understandable.

Scotland’s Sione Tuipulotu lifted the Calcutta Cup (PA Wire)
Scotland’s Sione Tuipulotu lifted the Calcutta Cup (PA Wire)

A meeting with a team still seeking a first Six Nations victory since 2023 is not, perhaps, an apposite moment for point-proving, yet a Scottish win would still feel significant in the context of what has come before.

It is worth remembering that they were, in fact, victors on their last visit to the Principality Stadium, and yet the very contrivance of letting a game they had led by 27 points ultimately be decided by one gave that occasion two years ago a somewhat strange feel.

Scotland beat Wales by the finest of margins in 2024 (Getty Images)
Scotland beat Wales by the finest of margins in 2024 (Getty Images)

The state of Wales would seem to demand a rather more convincing Scottish success, yet danger may lurk. Injuries to Jamie Ritchie, Jack Dempsey and Jamie Dobie were a reminder of just what the Six Nations demands, with a revamped competition schedule of three back-to-back-to-back Tests creating further pressures on the fitness and mentality of a squad that has, at times, felt small.

Townsend hopes the restorative rays and bright beaches of the Costa Blanca – Scotland have spent the week in a training camp south of Valencia – may be a help before a trip to a somewhat murkier waterside locale.

Gregor Townsend earned a reprieve with a scintillating Calcutta Cup win last week (Getty Images)
Gregor Townsend earned a reprieve with a scintillating Calcutta Cup win last week (Getty Images)

Plotting what would most certainly be an upset on the banks of the Taff is a familiar foe. Steve Tandy spent five-and-a-half years as Townsend’s right-hand man, establishing himself as a top-rated defensive lieutenant before his own country came crawling.

To term the issues he has faced in the months since taking the Wales job as teething problems would perhaps inaccurately reflect a rugby nation of dotage rather than infancy, but if the scale of the challenge that Tandy faces was not abundantly clear then four successive thrashings have rather emphatically made that point.

It is tough to look too harshly on a man dealt a hand that would have most seeking an alternative poker table. There were improvements to be found in the performance against France, if not the result, and a squad in need of positives will surely take all that they can find.

That said, a defensively-minded coach cannot be happy about an average concession of nearly 56 points per game in five matches against non-Japan opposition since taking charge. Tandy is currently both head and lead defence coach; while he has suggested that a full-time addition to his staff is on the way, the fact he is having to perform both roles shows about where Wales are at.

Steve Tandy is currently head coach and defence coach, although plans to appoint someone else to the latter role soon (Andrew Matthews/PA Wire)
Steve Tandy is currently head coach and defence coach, although plans to appoint someone else to the latter role soon (Andrew Matthews/PA Wire)

“I’m aware every coach, fan and player wants to win,” said Wales forwards coach Danny Wilson, another to have spent time on the Scottish staff in the past. “There’s the drive to do that but there’s also the reality of how we do that. We can’t cut corners.

“I’m long enough in the tooth to know it wasn’t going to be a smooth ride. It was going to have its bumps and I’m prepared for that. What we’ve got to stay focused on is working hard to make the improvements we need to make to get this amazing rugby nation back to what it’s been.”

On that front, the good news is that the Principality Stadium is expected to be rather fuller for the arrival of Scotland than it was for France, though a few are still voting with their feet amid a steady din of disquiet around Welsh rugby. But there is perhaps solace in the Scottish story.

It was only 12 years ago that there were questions over the short and long-term future of rugby in the northernmost of the nations that make up this championship, with a dour 20-0 home defeat to England a low point followed three rounds later by a 51-3 thrashing in Cardiff. The scales tipping that far in the other direction is not necessarily out of the question, but Scotland will take any kind of win that keeps them moving in the right direction; Wales any reason for belief that another fruitless campaign does not beckon.

Paul Gorst: ‘There is hope yet’ over new contract for Konate despite potential ‘sticking point’

Paul Gorst: ‘There is hope yet’ over new contract for Konate despite potential ‘sticking point’
Paul Gorst: ‘There is hope yet’ over new contract for Konate despite potential ‘sticking point’

Paul Gorst is remaining hopeful that Ibrahima Konate will ultimately sign a new contract at Liverpool, with the clock rapidly ticking on a decision over his future.


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The Frenchman’s current deal ends in just over four months’ time, although Arne Slot publicly stated last week that discussions are ongoing behind the scenes over a potential renewal for the 26-year-old.

Along with his Liverpool Echo colleague Ian Doyle, the aforementioned journalist recently made the case for the Reds’ number 5 to be kept on so that the club have secured a centre-back for his peak footballing years and won’t have to break the bank for a readymade first-team replacement.

Why Gorst thinks ‘there is hope yet’ over new deal for Konate

In a readers’ Q&A for the Liverpool Echo, Gorst was asked what he thinks will happen with Konate’s contract situation.

He replied: ‘It does indeed sound more promising on Ibrahima Konate’s contract situation, I would agree. I was in the room with Arne Slot on Friday when he told us that the club remained locked in talks over a new deal and it sounded fairly encouraging.’

(Photo by Lewis Storey/Getty Images)

The reporter raised one potential ‘sticking point’ regarding the player’s wage demands, noting that he’s still on the same weekly salary that he was earning when he came to Liverpool as a relatively unproven 22-year-old in 2021 and is now an established elite-level operator.

Gorst concluded: ‘Liverpool will have to pay a fortune to replace him this summer if he walks away, and that’s even factoring in Jeremy Jacquet’s imminent arrival. I’m hedging my bets at this point as we are nearly in March without a resolution but Mohamed Salah and Virgil van Dijk only renewed in April [2025], so there is hope yet.’

Konate would be justified in seeking a significant pay rise

The journalist’s point about Konate’s wages staying the same for five years while many other teammates have had pay rises in that time is a pertinent one, and the defender will have also seen new signings who aren’t readymade starters coming in on higher salaries.

According to Capology, the 26-year-old is still on £70,000 per week, a relatively low wage within the Liverpool squad. For context, Giorgi Mamardashvili and Joe Gomez (neither of whom start as regularly as the Frenchman) earn £85,000 weekly, while perennial substitute Federico Chiesa is on £150,000 per week.

Those three are all being paid more than the Reds’ number 5 even though he’s the only one who’s a fixed starter in Slot’s team. That’s not to discredit or demean the others, but to substantiate why the France international might justifiably be clamouring for a substantial pay rise.

Although Konate has had some below-par performances this season, he’s been one of the few defenders who’s remained consistently available to LFC, which is significant in a campaign where injuries have decimated our backline.

Also, the 26-year-old has enjoyed a notable resurgence in form since returning from compassionate leave last month after the death of his father, putting in an outstanding display in the hard-fought win at Sunderland a week ago.

As Gorst mentioned, it wasn’t until April of last year that Salah and Van Dijk renewed their deals, so there’s no need for panic with our number 5 just yet. That said, it’d feel like a huge weight off everyone’s shoulders for a new deal to be struck sooner rather than later.

“I don’t really like this” – Reece James reveals what he’s learnt about himself at Chelsea

“I don’t really like this” – Reece James reveals what he’s learnt about himself at Chelsea
“I don’t really like this” – Reece James reveals what he’s learnt about himself at Chelsea

Reece James has had to learn some hard lessons as a footballer and he’s revealed what he’s learned about his body as he’s got older.

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James has struggled with injury throughout his career, but it now seems those problems are firmly behind him, and he’s back to performing at his best for Chelsea.

The 26-year-old is now one of the older members of the squad, and is certainly looked to as a point of reference to the younger players.

Reece James on what he’s learnt about his body

It may look like things are easy for James at the moment, but for large parts of his career he’s massively struggled with injury, especially with his hamstrings.

However, James has been injury free for well over a year, and both he and Chelsea’s medical department deserve huge credit for getting to this point.

James appears to have put his injury problems behind him. (Photo by George Wood/Getty Images)

The skipper returned against Hull City last week having missed the previous three games, and James has revealed what he’s learnt about his body as he’s got older.

“The more games you play, the more you adapt,” he told the latest episode of CFC Unlocked.

“When I first got onto the scene, there wasn’t much of a routine, I wouldn’t say.

“As I have got older and learned and understood my body more, I’ve tried things and learned, ‘I don’t really like this, I don’t feel good when I do this.'”

Chelsea captain leading by example

James also admitted he found it very tough being captain at the beginning, and you can really see the leader he’s developed into.

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“I don’t really like this” – Reece James reveals what he’s learnt about himself at Chelsea

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Robert Sanchez revealed James is always the first one out on the training pitch, and you can see the players respect him.

Chelsea host Burnley on Saturday, and James will hope to be named in the starting line-up before a difficult March begins with back to back away games against Arsenal and Aston Villa.

Check out the latest edition of Simon Phillips’ SPTC podcast here:

Why Vitor Pereira’s mission at Nottingham Forest goes beyond avoiding relegation

Nottingham Forest’s last game was against Vitor Pereira’s last club. His first match in charge is against another of his former clubs. Maybe that is simply the logical consequence of the managerial turnover under Evangelos Marinakis and the choice of a peripatetic figure like Pereira.

A reign starts against Fenerbahce this evening, Forest playing in European competition on Asian soil. Pereira spent 25 games at the helm of the Istanbul club, which is three more than Sean Dyche lasted at Forest. And that, in turn, was almost three times as many as Ange Postecoglou mustered earlier this season.

Perhaps the Europa League led Forest to this point: appointing the manager who won it last year may have been Marinakis’ way of targeting continental silverware and a place in the Champions League. Instead, Forest are threatened with the drop into the Championship. Coincidentally, Postecoglou’s points-per-game ratio in this season’s Premier League is the same as Pereira’s: the Australian got one from five matches with Forest, the Portuguese two from 10 at Wolves.

If that may not bode well for Forest’s 12 remaining top-flight fixtures, the bare numbers might indicate that Dyche was unfortunate to be dismissed. He took 22 points from 18 Premier League matches, which is survival form; he lost only one of the last six.

But Forest were calamitously bad in that defeat, 3-1 at Leeds, while some of Dyche’s worst days came in other competitions: the hopeless performance at Wrexham in the FA Cup, or the 1-0 defeat to Braga in the Europa League which in turn consigned them to the play-off round.

There was something predictable about Dyche’s unravelling. At his best, his sides can be purposeful, efficient, good on the break, all qualities Forest displayed in their 3-0 win at Anfield. Too often, however, his football was awful. Give him better players – and Forest have spent around £200m in the last year – and his sides could still be unwatchable. Dyche could proudly wear the Forest badge, cite his past as a youth-team player at the club, surround himself with the 1990s luminaries Ian Woan and Steve Stone, but dismal football did not get him support in the stands.

Sean Dyche was sacked by Nottingham Forest last week (PA Wire)
Sean Dyche was sacked by Nottingham Forest last week (PA Wire)

If Pereira’s safety mission will be measured first in the points required to perhaps finish ahead of a resurgent West Ham – now being organised by Nuno Espirito Santo, the first of Marinakis’ three sackings this season – style may still be a consideration. Combine the track records of manager and owner and maybe there is no chance of longevity anyway – Pereira has had eight managerial stints of under 40 games – but there was the sense Marinakis wanted Forest to be more expansive than they were under Nuno, let alone Dyche.

In Morgan Gibbs-White, Elliot Anderson and Callum Hudson-Odoi, there should be a level of creativity, but Forest are the second lowest scorers in the Premier League. That could be attributed to the absence of Chris Wood, injured since October, or the reality Igor Jesus has been more prolific in Europe. Forest’s return of 35 shots but no goals in the stalemate with Wolves was un-Dychean.

Pereira was parachuted into Wolves mid-season last year, got fine goal returns from Jorgen Strand Larsen and Matheus Cunha and galvanised a club with his charisma and quotability. Forest, who rejected one supposed guarantee against relegation in Dyche, could hope for a repeat.

Vitor Pereira is tasked with another Premier League survival mission (PA Wire)
Vitor Pereira is tasked with another Premier League survival mission (PA Wire)

Europe is a complication as well an opportunity. Two of Pereira’s first three league games are against the last two champions. The last two away trips are at sides currently in the top five. Only two of those dozen matches are against anyone currently in the bottom six, only three against those in the bottom eight.

Two of his first three fixtures in all competitions, however, are against Fenerbahce. They include Pereira’s captain at Wolves, Nelson Semedo. They have signed N’Golo Kante to add to ambitious summer recruits such as Ederson, Marco Asensio and Milan Skriniar. They are unbeaten in the Turkish Super Lig, though not top of it. Their form in Europe has been more chequered. Jose Mourinho lost a Champions League qualifier to Benfica and then lost his job. Fenerbahce only came 19th in the league phase of the Europa League. A team featuring three Champions League winners nevertheless represent pedigree opponents.

Fenerbahce boast three Champions League winners including winter recruit N’Golo Kante (Getty Images)
Fenerbahce boast three Champions League winners including winter recruit N’Golo Kante (Getty Images)

Pereira may yet join Brian Clough in a select group of managers to win Forest European silverware. Or he could be part of a historically big band. He arrived at the City Ground saying he believed he had the trust of Marinakis. It is a statement that could make him sound naïve, potentially soon.

Forest may feel Dyche was sacked in time to help them beat the drop. The danger for Pereira, their fourth manager of the season, is that he has arrived sufficiently early for there still to be a fifth.

Gonzaga Secures Season Sweep Over USF in Half-Empty Chase Center, 80-59

Gonzaga Bulldogs forward Graham Ike (15) scores a two-pointer against the San Francisco Dons in the second half during a men's college basketball game at Chase Center in San Francisco, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026. Gonzaga won 80-59. (Photo by Santiago Mejia/San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

After playing significantly more in the second half during last Saturday’s 94-86 win at the Santa Clara Broncos, freshman Mario Saint-Supery was given the start at the lead guard spot over redshirt junior Braeden Smith for the No. 11 Gonzaga Bulldogs (26-2, 14-1 WCC) against the San Francisco Dons (15-14, 7-9 WCC) in the Chase Center in San Francisco, California.

Seeing the calmness and steadiness that he brought to the offense over the weekend, coach Mark Few decided to give the Spaniard his first start since Dec. 21 against the Oregon Ducks at the Moda Center in Portland, Oregon. This was the 11th different starting lineup that the head honcho has used this season.

Saint-Supery showed off his high basketball IQ and controlled the pace, always with his head up and fully aware of where everyone is on the court at all times. He turned it over only once and finished with a team-high six assists to go along with what was his first dunk in a Gonzaga uniform. That was two of Saint-Supery’s total 14 points on 4-for-6 shooting, plus four rebounds and two steals in the dominating performance over San Francisco.

SAINT-SUPÉRY ‼️ pic.twitter.com/Pgot1g2Gc8

— Gonzaga Basketball (@ZagMBB) February 19, 2026

As for coach Chris Gerlufsen’s Dons, the fourth-year man in charge gave sophomore star guard Tyrone Riley IV (team-high 16 points on 7-for-14 field goals, 2-for-5 three-pointers in 36 minutes) his first start after missing the last two games with a knee injury.

Gerlufsen’s group has underachieved this season to say the least. It’s a talented roster that had to deal with an injury to former McDonald’s All-American Mookie Cook for a good chunk of the season. If he had been healthy for the entire season, the outlook of this team could have been much different. Cook scored 12 points while going 7-of-9 at the charity stripe against the Zags.

The true freshman guard Legend Smiley (10 points on 2-for-4 three-pointers) has stepped up for the Dons, especially from beyond the arc versus Gonzaga in 2025-26. He shot 70 percent from beyond the arc on 7-f0r-10 looks in the two regular-season matchups.

Graduate forward and All-American candidate Graham Ike did not suit up the last time that the Zags beat USF at the McCarthey Athletic Center in Spokane, Washington, back on Jan. 24, 68-66. The matchup coming into tonight to watch was Ike and junior forward David Fuchs. He’s a solid rebounder and defender, but struggled with his shooting from the field (nine points on 3-of-10 field goals, six rebounds) and was in foul trouble throughout.

Ike scored a game-high 22 points on 10-for-17 shooting in 36 minutes played against San Francisco. That’s now eight straight games of at least 20 for the Gonzaga big man.

He wasn’t afraid to try to stretch the floor out, as the Dons were daring him to for the majority of the first half. Ike went even as far as the NBA three-point line, which just isn’t his game. The 6-9 talent went 2-for-5 on those from long range, adding in five rebounds and three assists for the Zags in their third straight triumph at the Chase Center. Why this final matchup between the two West Coast institutions wasn’t played on the Hilltop is quite befuddling.

Graham Ike currently has the highest usage percentage of any Gonzaga Bulldog all-time.

1. Graham Ike (24/25): 31.9 USG%
2. Filip Petrusev (19-20): 30.9 USG%
3. Kelly Olynyk (12-13): 30.7 USG%
4. Drew Timme (22-23): 30.2 USG%
5. Drew Timme (21-22): 29.9 USG%

Usage percentage…

— Hoop PNW (@hooppnw) February 19, 2026

In the house that Steph Curry built, Gonzaga struggled to hit from deep as a team at 5-of-17. This was the Zags’ fourth straight game with five or fewer three-pointers made. Gonzaga did go 29-of-45 (64.4 percent) from inside the arc and had a 46-to-26 points in the paint edge over San Francisco.

On the defensive end, junior wing Emmanuel Innoncenti (12 points on 6-for-11 shooting from the field, game-high eight rebounds, four steals in 35 minutes) played his best when leading the fastbreak. He has brought energy back to his teammates with his continuous ability to turn defense into offense.

The same can be said for true freshman wing Davis Fogle off the bench (eight points, five rebounds, three assists/zero turnovers), who has been an extremely fun player to watch in transition. He has a highlight reel of those ‘all by himself’ slams in his freshman campaign.

BANG 💥 BY FOGLE pic.twitter.com/bAFtA0Q5qE

— Gonzaga Basketball (@ZagMBB) February 19, 2026

Just a consistent effort in the passing lanes from Few’s unit, totalling 11 steals against the Dons. In his last three outings for the Zags, graduate guard Adam Miller’s decision-making as a facilitator (three assists to zero turnovers), on the defensive end (two steals), and with his overall shot selection (nine points on 4-of-6 field goals and 1-for-3 three-pointers) have drastically improved. That’s a great sign as March nears.

Gonzaga has now won 35 straight games over San Francisco, starting in 2013. The Zags lead the all-time series 79-22, dating all the way back to the 1979-1980 season. This may not be the last time these two programs face each other this season, possibly meeting at the Orleans Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, for the West Coast Conference Tournament.

Gonzaga has now won 35 straight games over San Francisco after their 80-59 victory at the Chase Center.

The Zags lead the all-time series over the Dons, 79-22. pic.twitter.com/zavd2mZrVg

— Arden Independence Cravalho (@a_cravalho) February 19, 2026

Gonzaga heads back home to the Inland Northwest and prepares for the surprisingly competitive Pacific Tigers (17-12, 8-8 WCC), who are currently in fourth place in the West Coast Conference. The second-to-last game in the Kennel this season will take place on Saturday, Feb. 21, at 6 p.m. PT on ESPN+/KHQ.

Graduate wing Steele Venters was suited up for the Zags against the Dons, but didn’t log any minutes in back-to-back contests. No official word on what is going on there, and something to monitor. In news around redshirt junior forward Braden Huff, Few stated on this past Sunday’s “The Mark Few Show” that he won’t be available for at least another three weeks, if more. That would put in a timetable for a possible return during the NCAA Tournament, but that seems unlikely as of right now. His left knee injury is a tricky one and is a long road to a full recovery.

With the Saint Mary’s Gaels winning a nail-biter in Climate Pledge Arena in Seattle, Washington, against the Seattle U Redhawks, 72-70, a three-bid West Coast Conference in the Big Dance is still very much a possibility. Gonzaga is still at the top of the conference standings, with a one-game lead over Saint Mary’s and Santa Clara.

Arden Cravalho is a Gonzaga University graduate from the Bay Area… Follow him on X @a_cravalho

UEFA Champions League: full results of the first-leg play-offs for the round of 16

UEFA Champions League: full results of the first-leg play-offs for the round of 16
UEFA Champions League: full results of the first-leg play-offs for the round of 16

UCL: all the first-leg play-off scores

Ligue des champions de l'UEFA / @btolat.com

The first-leg play-offs for a spot in the UEFA Champions League round of 16 have delivered their verdict, featuring spectacular clashes and several teams already taking a major step toward qualification.

On Tuesday, Galatasaray made a statement with a commanding win over Juventus (5-2). Borussia Dortmund also got the job done, overcoming Atalanta (2-0). Meanwhile, Real Madrid secured a narrow but valuable advantage against Benfica (1-0), while Paris Saint-Germain edged Monaco in a thrilling contest (3-2).

On Wednesday, Newcastle United recorded the biggest win of the play-offs, thrashing Qarabag (6-1). Bayer Leverkusen also put themselves in a strong position by defeating Olympiacos (2-0).

The surprise of the round came from Norway, where Bodo/Glimt overpowered Inter Milan (3-1). Finally, the clash between Club Brugge and Atletico Madrid ended in a spectacular 3-3 draw, keeping all the suspense alive ahead of the return leg.

Full first-leg play-off results

Liverpool desperate to agree deal before Real Madrid can pounce

Liverpool desperate to agree deal before Real Madrid can pounce
Liverpool desperate to agree deal before Real Madrid can pounce

Liverpool have already begun to rebuild the squad that won the Premier League last season.

The forward line was the main focus last summer, with two new fullbacks also being added, and a deal has already been agreed for Jeremy Jacquet to move to Anfield and bolster the defence in the summer.

The Reds’ next logical step is to address the midfield, especially as there have been times this season that all of the club’s available midfielders have been on the pitch at once.

A whole host of midfielders have been linked with a Merseyside move ahead of the summer, but one of the most intriguing names is Kees Smit, and a fresh report has offered more insight into Liverpool’s pursuit of the Dutchman.

Why Liverpool are prioritising Kees Smit

Arne Slot’s side are not the only ones interested in signing Smit this summer with several of Europe’s top sides, including Real Madrid, also monitoring the 20-year-old.

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According to a report from Spanish outlet Fichajes, the Reds have accelerated their interest and even contacted Smit’s entourage to get a deal agreed before any other team can.

A fee of around €50 million (~£43.5m) could be enough to persuade AZ Alkmaar to sell, but with multiple teams interested a bidding war is always a possibility.

The report states that Liverpool are keen to avoid finding themselves missing out on another midfield target to Real Madrid, with Jude Bellingham and Aurelien Tchouameni both opting to join Los Blancos over the Reds in years gone by.

Smit has established himself as a key player for AZ Alkmaar and has demonstrated a versatility in midfield that would be extremely useful in the Premier League.

With some doubt over the futures of a number of Liverpool’s current midfield options, the Reds desire to get a deal done as soon as possible is understandable, but things are rarely that simple in football.

Jesse Lingard: Former Man United star closing in on shock new club

Jesse Lingard: Former Man United star closing in on shock new club
Jesse Lingard: Former Man United star closing in on shock new club

Former Manchester United attacker Jesse Lingard is close to joining a new club.

United career

The academy graduate made his debut in 2014, but he only became a regular in the team during the 2015–2016 season.

He scored the winning goal in the FA Cup final in 2016 and also found the net in the final of the League Cup in 2017.

Lingard went on to make 232 appearances for Manchester United, scoring 35 goals in total.

Post-United career

After enjoying a short yet sweet loan spell at West Ham United, Lingard left Manchester United in the summer of 2022.

He spent the 2022–2023 season at Nottingham Forest before moving to South Korea at the start of 2024.

Lingard played two seasons at FC Seoul, scoring 19 goals in 67 matches before departing at the end of his contract earlier this season.

The Carrington graduate has been linked with moves back to England, Spain, and even the Netherlands to work with Robin van Persie at Feyenoord.

Remo move

Another team has emerged on the scene, however, for the England international, with Brazilian outlet Globo Esporte reporting that Remo are interested in the player.

The website reports that, “Remo is negotiating the signing of attacking midfielder Jesse Lingard, formerly of Manchester United. According to information obtained by ge, the offer is on the table and progressing towards an agreement between the Pará club and the 33-year-old English player.”

The report adds that, “discussions have been ongoing for several weeks. In recent days, negotiations have progressed, with a good chance of the player signing a contract with the club for the remainder of the season.”

Remo currently sit 16th in the Brazilian league standings after three matches, having failed to win any of their opening games of the season.

Jesse Lingard career stats

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The Peoples Person has been one of the world’s leading Man United news sites for over a decade. Follow us on Bluesky: @peoplesperson.bsky.social

Former NFL GM Asks Chiefs to ‘Move on’ From Travis Kelce

Former NFL GM Asks Chiefs to 'Move on' From Travis Kelce
Photo Credit: Candice Ward/Getty Images

Former New York Jets general manager Mike Tannenbaum has shared his opinion that the Kansas City Chiefs should now move on from Travis Kelce. He believes it’s time for the team to welcome young and explosive talent into the tight end roles. He argued that a player’s evaluation must be based on what they can offer in the future, not solely on what they have accomplished in the past. Assessing Kelce’s 2025 performance, Tannenbaum suggested that the NFL star is past his prime and that the Chiefs should make the right decision by letting him go.

Mike Tannenbaum talks about Travis Kelce

Current ESPN analyst and former NY Jets general manager Tannenbaum recently revealed why he believes the Chiefs should let Kelce go and welcome new talent. He said, “I would move on from Travis Kelce. Let me tell you why. When you’re in the front office, you have to project what a player is going to do, not what they’ve done.”

While he acknowledged Travis Kelce’s NFL achievements, he believes his 2025 performance was not up to par and that he’s past his prime. He elaborated, “Travis Kelce is a first-ballot Hall of Famer, but when you watch him and make an honest and sober evaluation of his 2025 performance, clearly his best days are behind him. If I was Kansas City, I would make the right, albeit difficult, decision to move on from Travis Kelce.” He also shared that the team should let in “younger and more explosive” talent.

"I would move on from Travis Kelce. … If I was Kansas City, I would make the right, albeit difficult, decision."@RealTannenbaum on Travis Kelce's future with the Chiefs ✍pic.twitter.com/Stsrhh7jZv

— SportsCenter (@SportsCenter) February 18, 2026

It is to be noted that Kelce has yet to decide on his playing career, which he may announce in early March. “I want to give the Chiefs a good opportunity, whether I come back or not—or whether they want me back or not. I’d like to make that decision before they’ve got to get draft picks and free agency opens to fill the roster appropriately,” he earlier told the reporters (via ESPN).

The post Former NFL GM Asks Chiefs to ‘Move on’ From Travis Kelce appeared first on Mandatory.

😳 He was on the wrong side: Chilavert defends racism against Vinicius

😳 He was on the wrong side: Chilavert defends racism against Vinicius

José Luis Chilavert has not hesitated to speak about the racist incident that occurred during the Benfica-Real Madrid match between Vinicius and Gianluca Prestianni.

In an interview with Radio Rivadavia, the former Paraguayan goalkeeper not only defended the young Argentine but also pointed directly at Vinicius Jr. as the instigator of the altercation, using a term that has sparked controversy.

"Why in Spain do they come and want to sacrifice Prestianni? If the first insult came from the side of the mo..., from Vinicius, who is black-skinned", he stated on the program La Oral Deportiva.

Chilavert was blunt in questioning why the Brazilian is often involved in these types of conflicts while his teammates are not. "90% of Madrid's players are black, how come they never have problems and Vinicius does with everyone?", the former Vélez player asked. He also accused the forward of being inconsistent in his fight against discrimination by not denouncing police violence in Brazilian stadiums against foreign fans.

Transphobic comments against Kylian Mbappé

The Paraguayan's criticism also extended to Kylian Mbappé, who showed his support for Vinicius. Chilavert launched a personal attack against the Frenchman.

"He talks about values and all that and lives with a transvestite, it's not normal. Everyone can do what they want with their life but it's not normal for a man to live with a transvestite". For the former goalkeeper, these figures are not the role models in a sport that, according to him, has lost its original essence.

And to complete the combo, homophobia

Chilavert also expressed his discontent in terms that are, to say the least, controversial about the modernization and extreme surveillance on the field.

"Since they put microphones and more cameras, football has become effeminate". With his usual direct and controversial style, the Paraguayan reiterated his solidarity with Prestianni, asking that the boy not be sanctioned and assuring that Vinicius "is the first to go and insult everyone."

This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇪🇸 here.

TST Images: UNLV defeated by Colorado State, 91-86, at Thomas & Mack Center

UNLV forward Jacob Bannarbie (10) and Colorado State Rashaan Mbemba (21) eye the ball after Bannarbie looses control of it  during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
UNLV forward Jacob Bannarbie (10) and Colorado State Rashaan Mbemba (21) eye the ball after Bannarbie looses control of it during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

LAS VEGAS —UNLV was defeated by Colorado State, 91-86 during college basketball game on Wednesday Feb. 18, 2026 and The Sporting Tribune’s Kalin Sipes were there to capture the following TST Images.  

UNLV guard Al Green passes the ball during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
UNLV guard Al Green passes the ball during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

Kalin Sipes - The Sporting Tribune

UNLV guard Al Green passes the ball during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

Colorado State coach Ali Farokhmanesh yells towards his players from the bench during second half of college basketball game against UNLV  on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Arena in Las Vegas.
Colorado State coach Ali Farokhmanesh yells towards his players from the bench during second half of college basketball game against UNLV on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Arena in Las Vegas.

Kalin Sipes - The Sporting Tribune

Colorado State coach Ali Farokhmanesh yells towards his players from the bench during second half of college basketball game against UNLV on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Arena in Las Vegas.

Colorado State guard Jevin Muniz (55) takes the ball down the court during second half of college basketball game against UNLV  on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Arena in Las Vegas.
Colorado State guard Jevin Muniz (55) takes the ball down the court during second half of college basketball game against UNLV on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Arena in Las Vegas.

Kalin Sipes - The Sporting Tribune

Colorado State guard Jevin Muniz (55) takes the ball down the court during second half of college basketball game against UNLV on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Arena in Las Vegas.

UNLV guard Issac Williamson (12) attempts to move through Colorado State  Brandon Rechsteiner (2) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
UNLV guard Issac Williamson (12) attempts to move through Colorado State Brandon Rechsteiner (2) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

Kalin Sipes - The Sporting Tribune

UNLV guard Issac Williamson (12) attempts to move through Colorado State Brandon Rechsteiner (2) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

UNLV guard Dravyn Gibbs-Lawhorn (0) takes the ball down the court during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
UNLV guard Dravyn Gibbs-Lawhorn (0) takes the ball down the court during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

Kalin Sipes - The Sporting Tribune

UNLV guard Dravyn Gibbs-Lawhorn (0) takes the ball down the court during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

UNLV guard Howie Fleming Jr (3) eyes the basket while guarded by Colorado State Jevin Muniz and Brandon Rechsteiner (2) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
UNLV guard Howie Fleming Jr (3) eyes the basket while guarded by Colorado State Jevin Muniz and Brandon Rechsteiner (2) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

Kalin Sipes - The Sporting Tribune

UNLV guard Howie Fleming Jr (3) eyes the basket while guarded by Colorado State Jevin Muniz and Brandon Rechsteiner (2) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

UNLV forward Jacob Bannarbie (10) takes the ball down the court while guarded by Jevin Muniz (55) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
UNLV forward Jacob Bannarbie (10) takes the ball down the court while guarded by Jevin Muniz (55) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

Kalin Sipes - The Sporting Tribune

UNLV forward Jacob Bannarbie (10) takes the ball down the court while guarded by Jevin Muniz (55) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

Colorado State guard Jevin Muniz (55) drives towards the basket while guarded by UNLC center Emmanuel Stephen (34) during second half of college basketball game against UNLV  on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Arena in Las Vegas.
Colorado State guard Jevin Muniz (55) drives towards the basket while guarded by UNLC center Emmanuel Stephen (34) during second half of college basketball game against UNLV on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Arena in Las Vegas.

Kalin Sipes - The Sporting Tribune

Colorado State guard Jevin Muniz (55) drives towards the basket while guarded by UNLC center Emmanuel Stephen (34) during second half of college basketball game against UNLV on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Arena in Las Vegas.

UNLV forward Jacob Bannarbie (10) and Colorado State Rashaan Mbemba (21) eye the ball after Bannarbie looses control of it  during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
UNLV forward Jacob Bannarbie (10) and Colorado State Rashaan Mbemba (21) eye the ball after Bannarbie looses control of it during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

Kalin Sipes - The Sporting Tribune

UNLV forward Jacob Bannarbie (10) and Colorado State Rashaan Mbemba (21) eye the ball after Bannarbie looses control of it during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

UNLV forward Walter Brown (22) attempts to pass the ball over Colorado State guard Kevin Muniz (55) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.
UNLV forward Walter Brown (22) attempts to pass the ball over Colorado State guard Kevin Muniz (55) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.

Kalin Sipes - The Sporting Tribune

UNLV forward Walter Brown (22) attempts to pass the ball over Colorado State guard Kevin Muniz (55) during first half of college basketball game against Colorado State on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026 at Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas.


Olympic trials to £6m deal - Shields' full-circle moment

Claressa Shields holds out her arms and is wearing gold boxing gloves and a gold and green vest as she stands next to the ropes of a boxing ring
Claressa Shields has three knockout wins from her 17 victories [Getty Images]

Six months before the 2012 Olympics, American Claressa Shields took her first step on the path to greatness.

Aged only 16, Shields beat national champion Franchon Crews-Dezurn, who was eight years her senior, at the US Olympic trials.

Shields would go on to win gold at the Games in London and earn a further two victories over Crews-Dezurn in the amateur ranks.

A fourth successive win followed when they met on their professional debuts in 2016 - and the pair are set to reignite their rivalry on Saturday when Shields defends her undisputed heavyweight status.

"Me and Franchon have always said that for some reason we are always intertwined in each other's lives," Shields told BBC Sport.

"If you take it back to when I was 16, she was ranked number one in the country and I was ranked number seven and the people who were ranked lower had to pull out a ball and it would tell you who we were fighting against - I pulled out number one.

"Now we meet again on the first fight of my major deal."

The major multi-fight deal that Shields speaks of was signed with Wynn Records and Salita Promotions in November.

It is worth a staggering $8m (£6.1m) and also came with an additional $3m (£2.2m) signing-on bonus.

Those figures are unheard of in women's boxing but Shields, a two-time Olympic gold medallist, five-weight world champion and three-weight undisputed champion, is no stranger to raising the bar.

"I have never heard of a man getting that kind of signing bonus. I've heard of men getting a $1m (£739,000) signing bonus but never $3m," Shields said.

"I would love to ask ChatGPT, 'Has a man ever got a $3m signing bonus for a boxing contract?'

"My contract now is big overall and I'm getting back paid. When I came out of the Olympics with two gold medals, I should have got a $1m signing bonus for whoever I went with but that didn't happen.

"Now it's years later but I'm getting it all back. I've been able to make millions over the past few years."

Regular knockouts motivating history-maker

Claressa Shields holds the WBA, WBC, IBF, WBO, WBF and The Ring middleweight titles across her arms
Claressa Shields first became a world champion at super-middleweight in 2017 [Getty Images]

Shields is the self-proclaimed Greatest Woman of All Time (GWOAT) and has a catalogue of evidence to back that claim up.

The 30-year-old won her first world title in just her fourth professional bout - becoming a unified super-middleweight champion.

That sparked a run of 14 successive world title fights and Shields is yet to lose in 17 contests as a professional.

Her last defeat came as an amateur in 2012 against Briton Savannah Marshall - a defeat she atoned for in 2022.

Despite achieving more than most in a full career, Shields does not lack the motivation to reach new highs.

"It's seeing how great I can be as a fighter," Shields said.

"I want to get my skillset and body to the position where I can go the extra mile and get the knockout after I've dominated these girls for five or six rounds.

"That's what pushes me.

"It's all about how great can I be. When it's all over, you don't get your youth back."

Price or Mayer? Shields welcomes all challenges

After experimenting with mixed martial arts twice - winning two and losing one - Shields has made clear her intention to stick to pugilism for the rest of her career.

Shields turns 31 next month and intends to continue boxing until she is 38, leaving the door open for plenty of tests.

Unified welterweight champion Lauren Price and Mikaela Mayer, who holds the WBO welterweight title and is also a unified champion at light-middleweight, have both called out Shields in recent times.

Wales' Price has urged Shields to come down from heavyweight, but that would mean the American dropping five divisions.

"If Mikaela and Lauren want to prove their greatness - and I'm willing to give them that chance - then it's 163lb and 165lb. I don't have to prove anything," Shields said.

"Lauren has no excuse for 165lb (75kg) because we both fought at 75kg for our Olympic gold medals. Let's not make excuses with the weight classes."

Price won Olympic gold at middleweight in 2020 but has spent her entire professional career at welterweight and defends her world titles against Stephanie Pineiro Aquino in April on BBC Two.

Mayer is a three-division world champion and has fought as high as light-middleweight.

"I don't know why these girls think I have to go down two or three weight classes when Terence Crawford went up three weight classes to fight Canelo [Alvarez]," Shields said.

"The thing I find so crazy about this is when I was at 154lb, 160lb and 168lb - no-one would fight me. Now I'm at 175lb all these girls are calling me out to fight.

"Where were you all when I was undisputed at 160lb twice? Where were you at when I was at 154lb? I couldn't get a fight. I had to beg girls to fight."

More boxing from the BBC

What channel is Ole Miss vs. LSU women's basketball on? Time, TV schedule, live stream to watch SEC game

Ole Miss, LSU women's basketball

What channel is Ole Miss vs. LSU women's basketball on? Time, TV schedule, live stream to watch SEC game originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

It's a top-20 showdown in Oxford on Thursday night. Ole Miss women's basketball hosts LSU in the rivals' only matchup of the season.

The highly anticipated game couldn't come at a better time. With both teams in need of a solid victory, you can expect this to be a hard fought battle between the Tigers and Rebels.

While LSU has the upper hand, a well-balanced offense and defense, it will need to get past Cotie McMahon, who leads the Rebs with 20.5 points per game.

It's a battle in Oxford. Here's how to watch Ole Miss vs. LSU women's basketball with live stream and start time information.

What channel is Ole Miss vs. LSU women's basketball on?

Ole Miss vs. LSU women's basketball will be broadcast on ESPN. Cord-cutters can live stream the game using the ESPN app.

Now you can watch ESPN without cable. Stream live NBA, NFL, MLB, NHL, college sports, plus SportsCenter, First Take, and all your favorite ESPN shows—anytime, anywhere—only in the new ESPN app.

Ole Miss vs. LSU women's basketball start time

  • Date: Thursday, Feb. 19
  • Time: 9 p.m. ET

Ole Miss will face LSU women's basketball on Thursday, Feb. 19. Tipoff is set for 9 p.m. ET from The Sandy and John Black Pavilion in Oxford, MS.

Ole Miss vs. LSU women's basketball radio station

  • Radio channel: SiriusXM channel 81 (Ole Miss), 192 (LSU)

Tune into Ole Miss vs. LSU women's basketball live on SiriusXM. The Rebels' broadcast will be on channel 81 while the Tigers' broadcast will be on channel 192.

New subscribers can listen to SiriusXM for free for four months. Listen to live NFL, MLB, NBA and NHL games, plus NASCAR, college sports and more. Stay updated with all the news and get all the analysis on multiple sport-specific channels.

Ole Miss women's basketball schedule 2025-26

Below is a look at the Rebels' upcoming schedule.

DateGameTime (ET)
Thurs., Feb. 19vs. LSU9 p.m.
Sun., Feb. 22at South CarolinaNoon
Thurs., Feb. 26vs. Florida6 p.m.
Sun., March 1vs. Texas A&M3 p.m.

LSU women's basketball schedule 2025-26

Below is a look at the Tigers' upcoming schedule.

DateGameTime (ET)
Thurs., Feb. 19at Ole Miss9 p.m.
Sun., Feb. 22vs. Missouri4 p.m.
Thurs., feb. 26vs. Tennessee6 p.m.
Sun., March 1at Mississippi State4 p.m.

Can Amber Glenn still medal? Explaining scenarios for 2026 women's final after short program mistake

Can Amber Glenn still medal? Explaining scenarios for 2026 women's final after short program mistake originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Amber Glenn arrived at the 2026 Olympics with expectations of at least competing for gold after winning three consecutive U.S. national championships, but her singles bid quickly took a hit on Tuesday.

Glenn missed an attempt at a triple loop during her short program routine in Milan, bringing her to tears and leaving her ranked 13th among all competitors.

Tuesday's short program wasn't a medal event, but it does contribute to the final scores that determine the three women's singles medalists.

Can Glenn still find her way onto the podium on Thursday? Here's what you need to know.

MORE 2026 OLYMPICS: Live medal tracker | Viewer's guide | Day-by-day schedule

Can Amber Glenn still medal?

Glenn enters Thursday's free skate routine ranked 13th following her short program mishap. History says her chances of getting a score that pushes her into the top three, or even close, are slim. 

Here's a look at where each women's singles medalist from the last seven winter games ranked after their short program routine:

YearGold medalistSilver medalistBronze medalist
20221st3rd2nd
20181st2nd3rd
20142nd1st3rd
20101st2nd3rd
20063rd1st2nd
20024th2nd1st
19982nd1st4th

Over the last seven Winter Olympics, no woman has finished lower than fourth in the short program and gone on to win a medal. Since Glenn finished 13th, her chances are distant, even with the free skate offering more points.

This year's men's singles competition might offer some more hope. The medalists finished fifth, second and ninth, respectively, in short program. 

Glenn already has a gold medal through an American win in the team portion of Olympic figure skating, but such strong performances by the competitors ahead of her -- including teammate Alysa Liu -- have put her in a major hole in her chase for another. In all likelihood, a dominant showing by Glenn would have to be accompanied by total collapses from a few skaters ahead of her in the standings for her to make the podium.

MORE:How old is Amber Glenn?

Olympic figure skating standings for women's final

Here's a look at the 24 skaters who advanced to the women's final and their short program scores:

RankSkaterCountryShort program score
1Ami NakaiJapan78.71
2Kari SakamotoJapan77.23
3Alysa LiuUnited States76.59
4Mone ChibaJapan74.00
5Adeliia PestrosianAIN72.89
6Anastasia GubanovaGeorgia71.77
7Loena HendrickxBelgium70.93
8Isabeau LevitoUnited States70.84
9Haein LeeSouth Korea70.07
10Niina PetrokinaEstonia69.63
11Nina PinzarroneBelgium68.97
12Sofia SamodelkinaKazakhstan68.47
13Amber GlennUnited States67.39
14Jia ShinSouth Korea65.66
15Iida KarhunenFinland65.06
16Julia SauterRomania63.13
17Olga MikutinaAustria61.72
18Lara Naki GutmannItaly61.56
19Ekaterina KurakovaPoland60.14
20Ruiyang ZhangChina59.38
21Kimmy RepondSwitzerland59.20
22Mariia SeniukIsrael58.61
23Livia KaiserSwitzerland55.69
24Lorine SchildFrance55.63

MORE:Full details on Amber Glenn's short program misstep

Amber Glenn's short program mistake

Glenn impressed for much of her short program routine, but the margin is thin on the biggest stage in the world. She couldn't complete a triple loop near the end of her routine, only completing two rotations, which earned her a zero for the jump.

The ending of Amber Glenn's short program. pic.twitter.com/CWK6kLWEyx

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 17, 2026

After the mishap, Glenn was visibly emotional and ranked 13th out of 29 skaters, including third out of three Americans in the competition.

MORE: Meet star U.S. figure skaters Amber Glenn, Alysa Liu and Isabeau Levito

Why did Amber Glenn get a zero?

Glenn was required to do a triple loop at that point in her routine but only completed two rotations, so her attempt was ruled an "invalid element" by the judges.

The missed triple loop didn't give her a zero for her entire routine, which was otherwise strong, but it meant she couldn't earn any points for that part of her routine. 

With the margin so small between Glenn and the other top skaters, a zero for just one element made a major difference. Glenn finished 13th among 29 short program competitors, more than 11 points out of the lead and more than nine points out of third.

Chelsea’s academy wonderkid spotted in first team training again after debut last week

Chelsea’s academy wonderkid spotted in first team training again after debut last week
Chelsea’s academy wonderkid spotted in first team training again after debut last week

Chelsea academy wonderkid Jesse Derry has been spotted in first team training again after making his debut last week.

Well, Derry isn’t strictly a Chelsea academy graduate because he didn’t really come through Chelsea’s academy as such. The 18-year-old was picked up from the Crystal Palace academy back in 2025, but he has spent his time within the Chelsea academy since then making his was in the U21s squad.

EXCLUSIVE! Two more NEW names added to Chelsea summer list of targets – One from Wolves and one from Atletico Madrid!! 👀

But last week, the attacking midfielder, who is rated very highly within the club, made his first team debut under Liam Rosenior. The Blues boss bought Derry on against Hull City in the second half and gave him a decent run out, something he will never forget.

Derry is a top player, and it looks like Rosenior has wanted to take another look at him this week in training as they prepare to take on Burnley at the weekend in our next Premier League fixture.

Derry in training

As you can see above, Derry, along with another academy player, Shim Mheuka, were both involved in full first team training for Chelsea yesterday as the lads returned back after a little break earlier this week.

It does make you wonder whether the youngster will be involved at all in the Chelsea squad for the weekend, or one going forward soon.

In other news…

Chelsea star Enzo Fernandez is topping the xG charts and playing some of the most effective attacking football of his whole career at the club. We can’t wait to see what he produces in the final third of the season.

Mamadou Sarr made a promising first start for Chelsea – but how many more will he get before the season is out?

Check out the latest edition of Simon Phillips’ SPTC podcast here:

The Hoddle of Coffee: Tottenham Hotspur news and links for Thursday, February 19

LONDON, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 1: Pape Matar Sarr of Tottenham Hotspur applauds the fans during the Premier League match between Tottenham Hotspur and Manchester City at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on February 1, 2026 in London, England. (Photo by Vince Mignott/MB Media/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning everyone.

It’s hard to believe we’re nearly at the end of the Winter Olympics. Wednesday’s action brought to dramatic hockey games in which both Canada and the US survived in overtime.

But the big story of the Games so far has to be the dominance of Norwegian cross country skier Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo.

The Norwegian on Wednesday won his fifth gold medal of this year’s games and his 10th overall, a new record for the Winter Olympics.

Klaebo went what the kids would call “viral” earlier in the Games with that insane climb in the men’s individual spring last week. Just look at this:

Sub-six-minute mile pace uphill on skis: #WinterOlympics SPEED. 🔥 pic.twitter.com/trof9rs4zf

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 10, 2026

He used that immense power again on Wednesday to push Norway to gold in the men’s team sprint, beating out the Americans in the process.

Johannes Klaebo hit another gear. #WinterOlympicspic.twitter.com/hgkaYNp0vG

— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) February 19, 2026

Norwegians actually make up four of the five athletes on the all-time Winter Olympic medal list, with three of them being cross country skiers.

There is now one more men’s cross country skiing race left in the Olympics: the 50km mass start casual on Saturday. Will Klaebo make it a sixth gold?

Fitzie’s track of the day: Love, by Lambrini Girls

And now for your links:

Alasdair Gold: “The four Tottenham players Igor Tudor had already worked with before arriving at the club”

Jay Harris ($$): “Reunion with Igor Tudor could help Randal Kolo Muani finally find form at Spurs”

CommBank Matildas: “CommBank Matildas unveil final squad for AFC Women’s Asian Cup Australia 2026”

BBC: “’Bottle word will be used’ for Arsenal – is title ‘in Man City’s hands’?”

Once again Manchester City are linked with an England international but there looks to be a catch

Once again Manchester City are linked with an England international but there looks to be a catch
Once again Manchester City are linked with an England international but there looks to be a catch

It would seem that signing a right-back and another midfielder will be high on the priority list for Manchester City this summer. Those two positions look to be the last spots in Pep Guardiola’s squad rebuild that need to be addressed. A new report has indicated that City could be set to push to sign Newcastle United’s versatile full-back Tino Livramento this summer. The England international is a quality player, and he does look suited to playing at right-back in this City side. But there is one major issue with Tino Livramento: his injury history. Could Livramento’s injury history see City look elsewhere to sign a right-back this summer? Perhaps it could, especially given how well Matheus Nunes has played in the role this season.

Manchester City are again linked with a summer move to sign Tino Livramento from Newcastle.

Alex Crook has reported for TalkSport that Manchester City are set to ready to make a strong push this to sign Tino Livramento from Newcastle this summer. Furthermore, Crook reports that City has been tracking Livramento for several months. It is also reported by Crook that Newcastle is eager to get Tino Livramento to commit his future to the club. As of yet, there is no indication that Livramento is eager to sign a new contract with Newcastle.

There is one standout red flag with Tino Livramento as a player.

As a player, Tino Livramento is more than good enough to play, and thrive, at Manchester City. When fully fit, Livramento is one of the top full-backs in the Premier League. His defensive acumen, positioning, and work in possession is elite. There is no question marks surrounding Livramento’s talent. The issue is his injury history. Given that Newcastle would likely demand a sizable transfer fee to sell Livramento, is Livramento’s injury history enough to see City look to sign another right-back? It could well be on closer inspection.

This season alone, Tino Livramento has missed 23 matches. As per transfermarkt, the England international has missed twelve matches this season due to two separate knee injuries. He has currently missed eleven matches due to a hamstring injury. Tino Livramento’s season has been wrecked by injury. He also suffered an ACL injury way back in the 21/22 season. But he did recover from that particular injury to establish himself as one of the Premier League’s top full-backs. The issue with City signing Livramento is his injury history. Perhaps it is enough to see City look at alternative targets to fill in at right-back.

To bring it right around, Matheus Nunes has firmly established himself as Manchester City’s first-choice right-back. If Tino Livramento were to arrive at City in the summer, he’d want to take Nunes’ place. He is more than capable of doing that. But perhaps Livramento’s injury history could see City back Nunes in and look for a younger right-back to compete with the Portuguese international.Brentford right-back Michael Kayode is a player that comes to mind in that scenario.

Manchester City have once again been linked with a potential summer move for Tino Livramento. Livramento’s quality as a player isn’t in question. His durability is, and perhaps the question marks that surround Livramento could see City go in another direction in their bid to sign a right-back in the summer.

Strong excitement for Morocco's matches ahead of the World Cup

Strong excitement for Morocco's matches ahead of the World Cup
Strong excitement for Morocco's matches ahead of the World Cup

Morocco: Exceptional support for the two friendly matches!

Morocco / @x.com

With just a few months to go before the kickoff of the 2026 World Cup, the Moroccan national team is continuing its serious preparations by scheduling two prestigious friendlies against Ecuador and Paraguay, on March 27 and 31.

High demand for Morocco match tickets ahead of the World Cup

Walid Regragui's men will first take on Ecuador on March 27 at the Riyadh Air Metropolitano Stadium in Madrid, before facing Paraguay on March 31 at the Bollaert-Delelis Stadium in Lens, France.

The buzz around these two fixtures is remarkable. No fewer than 54,000 tickets were sold in less than five hours: 31,000 for the Madrid clash and 23,000 for the Lens match, according to the organizing committee.

In an official statement, the organizers praised the tremendous support from the Moroccan community living in Europe, emphasizing that it provides a real morale boost for the Atlas Lions as the World Cup approaches.

Liverpool star 'waiting for offer' amid transfer interest

Liverpool star 'waiting for offer' amid transfer interest
Liverpool star 'waiting for offer' amid transfer interest

Alexis Mac Allister waiting for contract offer as Man United circle

A deal seeing any Liverpool player head to Old Trafford, or vice versa, has always felt unlikely but links between Mac Allister and Manchester United persist anyway.

The Argentine has been a regular at Anfield since his arrival and his father, Carlos, has now had his say on the current transfer speculation.

“Alexis is only thinking about Liverpool at the moment,” Mac Allister’s father told Winwin. “We are waiting for an offer to renew his contract. We'll see what the club's plan is.”

The 27-year-old is under contract until 2028, so a renewal won’t have been a priority for Liverpool heading into this season, but the interest from Manchester United could force the club’s hand.

Mac Allister’s midfield partner Dominik Szoboszlai is also in line for a renewed deal on improved terms before the summer, and that deal could also shape Mac Allister’s demands.

When asked if the player would consider a move if no contract offer arrives, Carlos Mac Allister said: “We'll wait and see what happens in terms of the renewal. That's all.”

Alessia Russo, a striker capable of dragging Arsenal and England through tournaments

Alessia Russo, a striker capable of dragging Arsenal and England through tournamentsThere was the exquisite side-footed flick to set up Caitlin Foord’s shot, the leap where she fell just an inch short of heading home, and the effort Leuven’s goalkeeper saved. There were the yells to her team-mates as she organised their press, the runs into midfield to recover the ball and the endless harrying that strangled Leuven’s ability to play out from the back.

Alessia Russo was everywhere as Arsenal booked their spot in the Champions League quarter-finals with a 3-1 (7-1 aggregate) win over Leuven, and that is before you even mention her two goals.

“She’s always switched on,” head coach Renee Slegers said after the match. “She’s always present in every phase, in the press, in our counter pressure, working all the way back. She does so many good things.”

Russo is the forward who can drag teams through tournaments — not just because of her poaching, but via her diligent pressing and fine link-up play.

Her seven goals across eight games are the most of any player in the Women’s Champions League this season. These have not been stat-padding contributions; many have been instrumental to Arsenal’s progress. Her double to secure a 2-1 comeback victory over Real Madrid and her assist for Beth Mead’s winning goal against Twente were pivotal.

Russo’s double on Thursday — incidentally, her 49th and 50th goals for the club — rubber-stamped Arsenal’s progress to the quarter-finals, already all but assured by their 4-0 advantage from the reverse fixture last week. They also showcased exactly what she does best in the penalty area.

Midway through the first half, Russo latched onto a through ball and drove into the box before passing back to a team-mate and dropping off slightly. She then darted back into the area to receive the ball with her back to goal, shrugged off Kim Everaerts, and fired home.

In the 90th minute, after Sara Pusztai had equalised on the night for Leuven and Mariona Caldentey had restored Arsenal’s lead from the spot, Russo added their third. This time — having brought down a high ball under pressure and made the pass that kickstarted Arsenal’s counter-attack — she popped up at the other end of the move and slotted into the bottom corner after turning her marker.

The chance that best sums up Russo’s value is one she did not score. With 15 minutes remaining, as Leuven attempted to build around Arsenal’s box, Russo dropped deep into her own half to pick up the ball as it was poked clear. She turned and dribbled to the halfway line before releasing Foord to chase on the left. With Leuven’s defenders focused on Foord’s run, Russo continued into the penalty area and leapt to meet a cross at the far post. She could not quite direct it in and a corner was given instead — but the move, beginning with recovering possession in her own half and ending with her on the receiving end of the ball in the box, perfectly sums up her knack for self-service.

Her five Women’s Super League goals so far this season have been scored across only four games — but her direct output does not truly reflect her value. More so than her finishing, Russo’s physicality and hold-up play is what sets her apart as an elite striker: her ability to recover the ball in midfield and retain it under pressure while waiting for team-mates to join the attack is superb. The fitness that allows her to lead Arsenal’s press as vigorously as she did against Leuven is also remarkable.

Having such a robust target up top is particularly important when Arsenal are not at their most convincing, as they were not at times against Leuven. Though the tie finished 7-1 on aggregate, they had a few patchy moments in difficult conditions at Meadow Park. Russo’s chance in the 75th minute followed a sequence where Arsenal had looked unsettled under Leuven’s pressure, underlining her importance as a release valve.

“That was really good,” Slegers said when asked by The Athletic about Russo’s build-up contributions, “especially then in the second half when (Leuven) started to take more risks in their press and how they do things.

“Then we can play less into feet, or even sometimes not into feet because the pitch wasn’t perfect, but then she brings it down, controls it so well (under) pressure and then she has qualities to roll pressure and set other players up.”

Fifty club goals is a punchy headline figure, but Russo’s contribution is much greater than that. She is key not just for Arsenal’s finishing touch, but for their ability to maintain a threat on the counter, win the physical battle in midfield, and disrupt opponents’ build-up.

The 27-year-old has proven, for club and country, her ability to do those things when the stakes are highest. They will rarely be higher than when Arsenal face Chelsea in the quarter-finals, and — whether on the scoresheet or not — she will be crucial.

This article originally appeared in The Athletic.

Arsenal, Women's Soccer

2026 The Athletic Media Company

What channel is Knicks vs. Pistons on today? Time, TV schedule, live stream to watch Thursday NBA game

Knicks vs Pistons Game 4 042625

What channel is Knicks vs. Pistons on today? Time, TV schedule, live stream to watch Thursday NBA game originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

The Detroit Pistons will head to Madison Square Garden to face the New York Knicks.

These two teams and their fans have harbored animosity since the playoff series in April 2025. The rivalry between Jalen Brunson and Cade Cunningham is now a highlight of the NBA, and they will meet for the third time this season. 

In the past two meetings this season, the Pistons have defeated the Knicks convincingly. Now, New York aims to protect MSG and avoid being swept by Detroit this season.

Here’s everything you need to know about watching the Pistons battle the Knicks, including TV and streaming information.

 What channel is Pistons vs. Knicks on today? 

Pistons vs. Knicks will not air on traditional broadcast television. Instead, viewers can stream the game live with Prime Video.

Pistons vs. Knicks start time

  • Date: Thursday, Feb. 19
  • Time: 7:30 p.m. ET

Tip-off of Pistons vs. Knicks is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. ET on Thursday, Feb. 19. 

The game will be played at Madison Square Garden in New York.

Pistons vs. Knicks radio station 

Fans can listen to Pistons vs. Knicks live on SiriusXM via channel 86. 

New subscribers can listen to SiriusXM for free for four months. Listen to live NFL, MLB, NBA and NHL games, plus NASCAR, college sports and more. Stay updated with all the news and get all the analysis on multiple sport-specific channels.

Pistons schedule 2025-26

Here's a look at the upcoming schedule for Detroit:  

DateGameTime (EST)
Sat., Feb. 21at Bulls8 p.m.
Mon., Feb. 23vs. Spurs7 p.m.
Wed., Feb. 25vs. Thunder7:30 p.m.
Fri., Feb. 27vs. Cavs7 p.m.
Sun., Mar. 1at Magic6 p.m.

Knicks schedule 2025-26

Here's a look at the upcoming schedule for New York:  

DateGameTime (EST)
Sat., Feb. 21vs. Rockets8:30 p.m.
Sunday., Feb. 22at Bulls8 p.m.
Tue., Feb. 24at Cavs7:30 p.m.
Fri., Feb. 27at Bucks8 p.m.
Sun., Mar. 1vs. Spurs1 p.m.

Related Links

Cole Palmer’s friend vows to get him back ‘home’ to his ‘favourite’ team Man Utd

Cole Palmer’s friend vows to get him back ‘home’ to his ‘favourite’ team Man Utd
Cole Palmer’s friend vows to get him back ‘home’ to his ‘favourite’ team Man Utd

Cole Palmer’s friend says he will get the player back ‘home’ to his favourite team, suggesting it’s Manchester United.

I’m sure Palmer will not be too grateful to his pal for writing this on his Instagram account this week, after Palmer first initially shared a photo of the two of them.

EXCLUSIVE! Two more NEW names added to Chelsea summer list of targets – One from Wolves and one from Atletico Madrid!! 👀

I’m sure this story does not need any more fuel added to it, so Palmer will not be too pleased with his buddy for stoking this fire up.

Palmer has been linked with United a lot in recent times, even though some have done their best to squash this story. It seems pretty clear that the rumours and links are just not going to go away.

Palmer’s mate throws him under the bus!

As you can see above, Palmer’s friend, known as ‘Tunde’ on Instagram, posted the image along with the comment:

‘1 day i will get CP to UTD back home where he belongs. Go ask him who his favourite team is.’

Well, Tunde, I’m not sure whether you, or United, would be able to afford the massive fee that it would take to even make Chelsea think about selling Cole Palmer, who has a long contract at the club. Have you got a spare £180m perhaps!?

In other news…

Reece James had a really nice interview today with Chelsea where he spoke a little about growing up in a football crazy family.

Liam Rosenior’s bond with his players is becoming clear, and in particular his bond with Andrey Santos is notable.

Check out the latest edition of Simon Phillips’ SPTC podcast here:

'I must do a great job' - Ben Zekri is back, for challenge at Al Shabab

'I must do a great job' - Ben Zekri is back, for challenge at Al Shabab
'I must do a great job' - Ben Zekri is back, for challenge at Al Shabab

After not too long away, the inimitable Noureddine Ben Zekri is back.

The Algerian, known as something of a Roshn Saudi League survival specialist, was on Tuesday night confirmed as Al Shabab’s new manager until the end of the season, replacing the outgoing Imanol Alguacil.

Ben Zekri, of course, has been lighting up the Saudi Arabian top flight for some time with his particular brand of coaching - and celebrations.

Just check out last season, when he kept RSL debutants Al Kholood in the league and marked the accomplishment in his own, very special, way. To be fair to Ben Zekri, the Ar Rass outfit ultimately finished a brilliant ninth.

There was also the successful battle against relegation, and now trademark reaction to that, with Al Okhdood in 2023-24, not to mention similar successes before at Damac, Al Raed and Al Fayha.

At Al Shabab, Ben Zekri takes charge of a team laying 14th after 21 matches - only six points above the drop zone. And, even though the 2011-12 RSL champions won successive games late last month, they’ve lost their past two: at Al Kholood and then Friday’s 5-2 home defeat to Al Ahli.

So, no doubt looking over their shoulders, Al Shabab acted. And, in Ben Zekri, they’ve certainly given themselves the best opportunity to steer clear of the relegation dogfight.

“Thanks to God, I am very happy to be here,” Ben Zekri told the club’s official channel upon his appointment. “This is a very old club, a club with a long history... I'm very happy to be in charge of such a club."

"I'm always committed to work. The Roshn Saudi League is a strong league - I must do a great job in it.”

Ben Zekri’s first assignment at Al Shabab feels especially apt: on Friday, they travel to Abha to face Damac, the team one place below them in the standings.

Quickfire questions with Bayern Munich star Luis Díaz

MUNICH, GERMANY - AUGUST 9: Luis Díaz of FC Bayern München poses for a portrait during the official UEFA Champions League 2025/26 portrait session on August 9, 2025 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Alex Bierens de Haan - UEFA/UEFA via Getty Images) | UEFA via Getty Images

Luis Díaz is on fire right now, most recently getting involved in five goals in Bayern Munich’s 5-1 demolition of Hoffenheim and then grabbing an assist in the 3-0 win over Werder Bremen. It’s only fitting that he does quick fire questions with Kerry Hau from Sky Sports Germany, as captured by X account @iMiaSanMia:

Favourite German word? – Scheiß / Servus

Best dressing room DJ? – Phonzy & Michael [Alphonso Davies and Michael Olise]

Player with the best style? – Michael, Jonathan Tah & myself

Player with the worst style? – Nicolas Jackson

The first one gave me a chuckle since the first word that a player learns from his teammates at a new team abroad is most often a swear word (like Kevin Keegan with Hamburg in 1977). The second one is obvious: how many times have we seen Olise or Davies trundle out of the locker room in training lugging the massive speaker around?

As for best and worst styles, all I can say is I hope Jackson’s style isn’t as bad as his performances on the pitch.

Manchester City could be set to receive a boost ahead of a vital stage of the season

Manchester City could be set to receive a boost ahead of a vital stage of the season
Manchester City could be set to receive a boost ahead of a vital stage of the season

The Manchester City squad has been enjoying some time away from football this week. A rare opportunity for rest has come at the ideal time for Pep Guardiola’s squad. City has endured a hectic schedule over the past few months, and across that journey a host of City players have suffered injuries. Slowly but surely, City has had players come back from injury. John Stones has recently returned from a long injury layoff. Nico is also back after running himself into the ground for the cause from the end of November until January.

Jeremy Doku and Savinho are two other players whom City have missed due to injury. The pair look to be on the verge of returning, which is a huge boost for Manchester City ahead of a pivotal point in this season.

Manchester City could be boosted by the return of Jeremy Doku and Savinho.

Speaking after Manchester City’s 2-0 win over Salford City last weekend, Pep Guardiola was asked whether or not Jeremy Doku or Savinho were getting close to returning to the pitch. The Manchester City manager provided a positive update on the pair’s fitness. Speaking on Jeremy Doku, Pep Guardiola said: “Jeremy is close. He still doesn’t train with us, but we will see. He’s a little better, but [against Salford] we needed wingers.

We know how important he is. It helps us a lot in how we play. I’m more than delighted with how we behave. Antoine has played a lot of minutes, if you make shifts with Doku, Semenyo, Savinho, the opponents defend in their box for 90 minutes.

Speaking on Savinho’s fitness, Pep Guardiola said: “He’s been out for six weeks. He could [have played] a few minutes, but we didn’t want to take risks. Training two days ago was wow, so good. He’s close. Now we have a long week and players coming back.

Manchester City’s injury list is starting to dwindle.

The good news for Manchester City is that their injury list is starting to dwindle. Mateo Kovacic and Josko Gvardiol are City’s only two players who are out due to long-term injuries. However, Mateo Kovacic has returned to training recently, so the Croatian midfielder is on the comeback trail. After suffering an injury crisis of sorts throughout January, Pep Guardiola’s squad now has players returning and with that, depth. As the 2025/26 season enters a critical phase, Manchester City look to be hitting full strength in terms of the fitness of their squad. That could prove to be massive as the pressure of the 2025/26 season ramps up.

Jeremy Doku and Savinho returning would be massive for Manchester City. The pair would add depth and a different element to Manchester City’s attacking play, given their strengths as players. That is great news for Pep Guardiola’s side, and it remains to be seen if the pair will be available for Manchester City’s upcoming Premier League fixture against Newcastle United at the Etihad this weekend.

Graham Ike scores 22 points as No. 11 Gonzaga beats San Francisco 80-59

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Graham Ike had 22 points and No. 11 Gonzaga cruised to an 80-59 victory over San Francisco on Wednesday night.

Ike, the leading scorer in the West Coast Conference, has scored 20 or more in eight consecutive games. That matches the school record shared by Adam Morrison and Derek Raivio, both in 2006.

Mario Saint-Supery added 14 points and six assists for Gonzaga (26-2, 14-1), which holds a one-game lead in the league standings over Saint Mary's and Santa Clara. Emmanuel Innocenti had 12 points and eight rebounds, while Jalen Warely scored 11.

The Bulldogs beat the Dons for the 35th straight time, dating to 2012.

Tyrone Riley IV had 16 points for San Francisco (15-14, 7-9) in the final regular-season matchup between the programs before Gonzaga moves to the revamped Pac-12 next season.

Ike, the reigning WCC player of the week, sputtered with his shot most of the night and had to score nine points over the final five minutes to keep his streak going.

The game was played at Chase Center, home of the NBA's Golden State Warriors.

Both teams got off to a slow start.

San Francisco missed 11 of its first 15 shots and committed seven turnovers in the opening 10 minutes but still led 17-14 because of its rebounding and defense.

The Bulldogs went scoreless for five minutes late in the first half before Davis Fogle got them back on track. The freshman guard scored five points, including an emphatic dunk that led to a three-point play, as part of a big run that helped Gonzaga to a 41-29 lead at halftime.

Up next

Gonzaga hosts Pacific on Saturday.

San Francisco hosts Santa Clara on Saturday.

___

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here and here (AP News mobile app). AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

High school soccer: Wednesday's boys' and girls' playoff scores

Soccer ball on field.
 (Getty Images)

HIGH SCHOOL SOCCER PLAYOFFS
WEDNESDAY’S RESULTS

CITY SECTION
BOYS 
SECOND ROUND 

DIVISION I
#1 Chavez 0, #17 King/Drew 0 (Chavez wins 3-1 in shootout)
#9 Angelou 2, #8 LA University 0
#5 Chatsworth 3, #12 Sun Valley Poly 3 (Chatsworth wins in shootout)
#4 Granada Hills 2, #13 Van Nuys 1
#19 LA Marshall 2, #3 Diego Rivera 1
#6 Cleveland 1, #11 San Pedro 0
#7 Legacy 3, #10 Carson 1
#15 Granada Hills Kennedy 15, #2 Roybal 1

DIVISION II
#17 Canoga Park 2, #1 New West Charter 1
#9 Santee 1, #8 South Gate 0
#12 Arleta 3, #5 Annenberg 2
#20 Neuwirth Leadership Academy 2, #4 Orthopaedic 0
#14 Taft 3, #3 Fremont 2
#6 Garfield 3, #22 Elizabeth 1
#23 Huntington Park 5, #7 Alliance Health 0
#15 RFK Community 3, #2 Locke 3 (RFK wins 5-4 in shootout)

DIVISION III
#1 Los Angeles 2, #17 West Adams 1
#9 Franklin 4, #8 Alliance Bloomfield 0
#12 North Hollywood 3, #5 SOCES 1
#13 Foshay 2, #4 San Fernando 1
#3 Gardena 2, #14 Hollywood 1
#6 Animo Pat Brown 2, #11 Grant 1
#23 Sun Valley Magnet 2, #7 Collins Family 1
#2 LA Hamilton 2, #15 Bernstein 0

DIVISION IV
#1 Mendez 5, #16 Smidt Tech 0
#8 LA Roosevelt d. #24 New Designs University Park, forfeit
#5 East Valley 3, #12 MSCP 1
#4 Maywood Academy 1, #13 Animo South LA 0
#19 Lakeview Charter 2, #3 Downtown Magnets 0
#6 Panorama 2, #11 Triumph Charter 1
Aspire Ollin 0, #10 Alliance Levine 0 (Aspire Ollin wins 4-3 in shootout)
#18 Port of LA 2, #2 Belmont 1

Note:Quarterfinals Friday; Semifinals Feb. 25; Finals Feb. 27 or 28. 

GIRLS 
SEMIFINALS 

OPEN DIVISION 
#1 Cleveland 4, #5 Palisades 0
#6 New West Charter at #7 Granada Hills, 7 p.m.

Note:Finals Feb. 27 or 28 at TBA.  

SOUTHERN SECTION
QUARTERFINALS 

OPEN DIVISION 
Pool Play 
#1 Santa Margarita 1, #4 Oaks Christian 0
#3 Mater Dei 1, #2 Redondo Union 0

DIVISION 1
Westlake 4, Rosary Academy 0
Newport Harbor 0, Orange Lutheran 0 (Newport Harbor wins 4-2 in shootout)
Eastvale Roosevelt 0, Etiwanda 9 (Roosevelt wins 3-2 in shootout)
Sherman Oaks Notre Dame 3, Harvard-Westlake 1

DIVISION 2
Ayala 1, Saugus 0
San Marino 3, Portola 0
Millikan 1, Warren 0
Bonita 2, Riverside King 0

DIVISION 3
Crescenta Valley 0, Valencia 0 (Crescenta Valley wins 5-4 in shootout)
Paloma Valley 2, La Salle 1
Quartz Hill 4, La Canada 0
Simi Valley 1, Flintridge Prep 0

DIVISION 4
San Jacinto 1, Patriot 1 (San Jacinto wins 4-3 in shootout)
Arcadia 0, Granite Hills 0 (Arcadia wins 7-6 in shootout)
Immaculate Heart 2, Laguna Hills 1
Chino 1, Arlington 0

DIVISION 5
Artesia 1, Anaheim 1 (Artesia wins 5-4 in shootout)
Coachella Valley 4, Grand Terrace 3
Sultana 2, La Palma Kennedy 1
Del Sol 3, Alemany 2

DIVISION 6
Ocean View 4, Adelanto 2
Palmdale Aerospace 1, St. Pius X-St. Matthias Academy 1
Segerstrom 1, Arroyo Valley 0
Grace 1, Mayfair 0

DIVISION 7
Savanna 3, Nuview Bridge 0
Santa Monica Pacifica Christian 3, Ganesha 1
Cate 5, Santa Rosa Academy 1
Azusa 1, San Gabriel 1 (Azusa wins 4-3 in shootout)

DIVISION 8
Mountain View 3, CAMS 1
Buckley 2, Milken 1
Big Bear vs. Environmental Charter, Thursday at 2:20 p.m. at Galaxy Soccer Complex
Webb 4, Miller 0

Note:Semifinals Saturday; Finals Feb. 27 or 28.

THURSDAY’S SCHEDULE

CITY SECTION
BOYS
SEMIFINALS 
(Games at 3 p.m. unless noted) 

OPEN DIVISION
#4 Palisades at #1 El Camino Real
#6 Marquez at #2 South East, 6 p.m.

Note: Finals Feb. 27 or 28 at TBA.

GIRLS 
QUARTERFINALS 
(Games at 3 p.m. unless noted) 

DIVISION I
#8 Van Nuys at #1 Birmingham
#5 Chatsworth at #4 Granada Hills Kennedy
#11 LA Hamilton at #3 Wilmington Banning
#15 King/Drew at #7 Eagle Rock

DIVISION II 
#8 Mendez at #1 South East
#13 Lakeview Charter at #5 Animo Bunche
#19 Bravo at #6 LA Roosevelt
#7 Garfield at #2 Gardena

DIVISION III
#9 Maywood CES at #1 Fairfax
#5 Reseda at #4 Marquez
#6 Verdugo Hills at #3 Huntington Park
#7 Santee vs. #18 Manual Arts / #2 Angelou

DIVISION IV
#16 Franklin at #9 Aspire Ollin
#13 Arleta at #12 Monroe
#6 Animo De La Hoya at #3 Camino Nuevo
#10 Sun Valley Poly at #2 Fremont

Note: Semifinals Feb. 24; Finals Feb. 27 or 28 at TBA. 

Sign up for the L.A. Times SoCal high school sports newsletter to get scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Recap: Big First Half Fuels Wake Past Clemson 85-77

Feb 18, 2026; Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA; Wake Forest Demon Deacons guard Sebastian Akins (10) dribbles the ball defended by Clemson Tigers guard Dillon Hunter (2) during the first half at Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images | Jim Dedmon-Imagn Images

The streak continues! With a nearly wire-to-wire win over a very good Clemson Tiger team, the Deacs have now won 3 straight games in ACC play. After starting the season just 2-8 in the conference, Wake is now 5-8 and is potentially 1 win away from jumping all the way up to 9th place in the conference. It seems like maybe the team is starting to figure out how to play together and win games—better late than never.

Upped the win streak to 3❕ pic.twitter.com/ymeaWIbfDJ

— Wake Forest Men's Basketball (@WakeMBB) February 19, 2026

The first half was maybe the best half of basketball the Deacs have played all season—for a minute there it looked like Wake was going to blow the Tigers out of the gym. Clemson scored the first basket of the game and led for all of 47 seconds before Wake just started pouring it on. In the first 10 minutes of the game, the Deacs went on a 24-6 run to take a commanding 26-10 lead that they would hold for the remainder of the game. The basket must have looked like the size of an ocean out there for Wake, because they simply could not miss.

Give him some dap 😌 pic.twitter.com/RvauFFCQw6

— Wake Forest Men's Basketball (@WakeMBB) February 19, 2026

By the end of the first half, 7 of the 9 players that entered the game for the Deacs had scored, and 6 of those 7 were shooting 50% or better from the floor. Myles Colvin led the way with 14 first half points on a perfect 5-5 shooting (4-4 from 3). The hot shooting allowed the Wake lead to grow as high as 20 points before Clemson answered with a 7-0 run in the final 2 minutes to end the half. Despite the 2 minute lapse, Wake put up 45 points on 67% shooting from the floor against the 15th best defense in the country to take 45-32 lead at the break.

That 7-0 Clemson run continued into the 2nd half, with the Tigers scoring 9 of the first 10 points of the half to cut the lead down to just 5 points by the 16 minute timeout. In what would become a theme for the 2nd half, the Deacs answered back with a 5-0 run of their own to push the lead back to double digits.

Right to the rack ✔️ pic.twitter.com/oC95XvE5dG

— Wake Forest Men's Basketball (@WakeMBB) February 19, 2026

Clemson got back within 6 points several times throughout the half, but Wake did a phenomenal job of always answering back and keeping the Tigers at arm’s length. At times, it felt like Clemson was just 1 big momentum changing basket away from being able to catch up and vault into the lead, but the Deacs never let them get it.

Perhaps the biggest shot of the night came from Sophomore Sebastian Akins. With a little over 2 minutes remaining, the Tigers cut the lead back down to 6, and it definitely felt like they were making their final push to get back in the game. We have seen Wake stumble at the end of games several times this season, so I can’t be the only one that started to worry that we were about to see the same thing again. Akins was having none of it.

Gimme 3 Seb 👌 pic.twitter.com/gZhCONaLib

— Wake Forest Men's Basketball (@WakeMBB) February 19, 2026

With his 1st 3-pointer since the Longwood game in December, Akins stopped the Tiger run and put the Deacs back ahead by 9 points, effectively ending Clemson’s chances at winning the game. Akins would go on to make 5 free throws down the stretch to finish with 16 points on 4-7 shooting and help the Deacs win their 3rd straight conference game 85-77.

This is clearly a team that has not quit yet. The Deacs proved again tonight that they have the talent to not just play with, but beat, the top teams of the ACC. We are maybe starting to see the depth that was promised at the beginning of the season come into reality—led by Juke Harris’s 20 points, the Deacs had 5 players finish in double figures, and while Isaac Carr did not score in this game, he added 5 assists with just 1 turnover. Omaha Biliew, who finished with 8 points, probably would have finished in double figures as well if he didn’t foul out with 3 minutes remaining in the game. Juke has proven game in and game out that he is going to be able to score the ball, but if Wake can get more games like this from the supporting cast, they can turn into a pretty dangerous team to close out the season. I just wish it hadn’t taken them so long to figure it out.

With the win, Wake is now 5-8 in the ACC, and the chances of the Deacs finishing 8-10 or better have improved significantly. Obviously finishing in the middle of the pack was not the goal when the season started, but just a couple of weeks ago we were wondering if this team was even going to make the ACC tournament. Now, they have a realistic path to finishing at 0.500 in conference play. They could even be getting Nate Calmese back from injury before the start of the ACC Tournament (I remain skeptical on that but I guess we’ll see). There are still plenty of games left to played, but credit the Deacs for continuing to fight to turn the season around.

Hopefully, Wake can extend this winning streak for a couple of more weeks.

Go Deacs!

Romano: Man Utd to start negotiating deal for 23 G/A England star ‘over next months’

Romano: Man Utd to start negotiating deal for 23 G/A England star ‘over next months’
Romano: Man Utd to start negotiating deal for 23 G/A England star ‘over next months’

Barcelona have every intention of keeping Marcus Rashford beyond his season-long loan spell, which will expire in June.

The La Liga giants are delighted with the impact that the on-loan Manchester United star has had since swapping Old Trafford for Camp Nou.

However, recent reports have suggested that the Blaugrana were hoping to haggle a lower transfer fee when the time comes for them to activate Rashford’s £26 million buy option.

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Marcus Rashford’s deal: The state of play

(Photo by Clive Mason/Getty Images)

From United’s point of view, there is no chance of such a deal materialising. Barcelona will have to shell out the clause upfront, though INEOS chiefs are said to be kicking themselves behind the scenes for setting such a low sum, given the impact he’s had in Catalonia.

In the 34 appearances he’s made across all competitions, the 28-year-old has returned a hugely impressive 10 goals and 13 assists.

Rashford has particularly excelled in Europe, where he has found the back of the net five times and notched four assists in eight matches across the first phase of the competition.

Such stellar showings have put him in excellent standing ahead of this summer’s World Cup, especially considering Thomas Tuchel was utilising him in the second half of 2024/2025, when he was on loan with Aston Villa and looking to revive his career after falling out of favour under Ruben Amorim.

Rashford rules out Red Devils return

 (Photo by Yasser Bakhsh/Getty Images)

Surprisingly, it’s been suggested this week that current interim boss Michael Carrick would be keen on having Rashford at his disposal next season in the event he’s granted the job permanently – but the player himself has his heart set on a permanent Barcelona switch.

Fabrizio Romano shared an update on the Carrington graduate’s situation last night, saying: “Barcelona want to keep Marcus Rashford beyond this season. [They are] planning to negotiate and reduce the €30m (£26m) buy option from Man United.

“MUFC insist on Rashford’s fixed price to be received in full: €30m — salary also a topic to discuss over [the] next months.”

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Champions League: Bodø/Glimt brings down Inter

Champions League: Bodø/Glimt brings down Inter
Champions League: Bodø/Glimt brings down Inter

Another XXL performance from the Norwegians (3-1)

Champions League: Bodø/Glimt brings down Inter

Incredible FK Bodø/Glimt. After already stunning Manchester City and Atlético Madrid earlier in the competition, the Norwegian club has now dominated Inter Milan (3-1) in the Champions League play-offs.

The hosts struck first in the 20th minute thanks to Sondre Fet, who was brilliantly played through before beating Yann Sommer. Inter responded ten minutes later through Francesco Esposito (1-1). But after the break, Bodø/Glimt reclaimed control.

In the 61st minute, Jens Petter Hauge restored the lead for his side after an assist from Kasper Høgh. Moments later, Høgh sealed the victory himself, netting the third goal. Another sensational feat for Bodø/Glimt, who continue to cement their status as a formidable dark horse in this Champions League campaign.

Arizona Cardinals RB James Conner 2026 offseason profile

The 2026 league year is coming next month. It officially begins on March 11, with the legal negotiating period beginning on March 9.

The Arizona Cardinals have many roster decisions to make before then.

Leading up to the new league year, we will profile every player on the roster, go over what they did last season, what their contract status is and what they face in 2026.

Next up is running back James Conner.

James Conner's 2025 season

Conner had a very disappointing year, as he played in only three games before suffering a severe ankle injury that ended his season. Before he got hurt, though, he was not as explosive or effective as in previous seasons. He averaged only 3.0 yards per carry for 95 yards and one touchdown in three games.

James Conner contract status

Conner enters the final year of his two-year, $19 million contract extension. He is scheduled to make nearly $6.4 million in salary and is due a $1 million roster bonus. His contract will count more than $9.8 million against the salary cap.

James Conner offseason outlook

Soon to be 31 years old, coming off a season-ending ankle when it looked like he might have lost a little something before he got hurt, it feels almost a lock that he will be a salary cap casualty and cut before March 15 when his roster bonus is due. The move will save the Cardinals nearly $7.6 million in cap space, leaving $2.25 million in dead money.

With a new head coach, we can expect the Cardinals to look for a new No. 1 running back.

Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire's Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on SpotifyYouTube or Apple podcasts.

This article originally appeared on Cards Wire: James Conner's contract status and 2026 offseason outlook

Teen amputee sets sights on para-swimming win

A teenage girl with her hair pulled back is standing next to a swimming pool at looking at the camera with a closed-lip smile. She is wearing a black T-shirt with a blue strip and red sleeve and design
Annabel Kiki says she will not let losing her leg stop her from reaching her full potential [BBC]

A teenage amputee has set her sights on making her mark in the para-swimming scene after securing two gold medals.

Annabel Kiki, 17, from Cannock had to re-learn her favourite hobbies after being diagnosed with bone cancer at the age of 13 and having her left leg amputated above the knee.

After joining her local swimming club and winning two medals at the Staffordshire County Swimming Championships, she is now gearing up for her first national para swimming competition.

"I like to grab every opportunity that is presented to me and I'm not going to let what happened to me stop me from reaching my full potential, " she said.

A teenage girl in a swimming pool with her arms crossed at the ledge, She is wearing goggles and a black and red swimming cap. In front of her on the pool edge is a black bag and a prosthetic leg
The teen won two gold medals at the Staffordshire County Swimming Championships [BBC]

In 2024, she scooped the prestigious Golden Boot award, which recognises the top goal scorer, at the women's amputee football World Cup.

Learning to ski again is also among her list of recent achievements along with gracing the runway at London fashion week and being featured in the Italian Vogue magazine.

The athlete added: "Even when I'm taking my leg off in front of all the people in the crowd and all the teams, I'm trying to balance - I'm still trying to be the best person that I can possibly be.

"I've been through something horrific and even in the darkest of times you need to find positivity and find the good times.

"You know it's just what you need to do in order to push through what you're going through."

A young man in a black quarter zip jumper is smiling at the camera and standing next to a teenage girl with wavy brown hair who is wearing a white turtle neck jumper and pick and white cardigan with the letters APRA visible on her shoulder
Her brother Archie has said the athlete can whatever she puts her mind to [BBC]

Her cancer diagnosis followed what she thought was "just an aching knee" but led to 18 months of chemotherapy and the loss of her limb.

"It was such a terrible time to go through as a family and it was difficult to keep the morale high," her brother Archie recalled.

"The brilliant thing about Annabel is that no matter what she puts her mind to, I can guarantee that's what she'll be doing and she'll be brilliant at it."

A woman with straight blonde hair and a pick blazer is smiling at the camera and standing next to a teenage girl who has her hair pulled back and is wearing a blue hoody. They are both standing next to a swimming pool
Kiki has the support of her former school Chase Terrace Academy [BBC]

She has been training for her next challenge in the pool at Chase Terrace Academy, her former school.

Headteacher Nicola Mason added: "We're just so proud of her, I can't tell you how proud we are."

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