Aled Davies joined Cardiff from Saracens in 2024 [Huw Evans Picture Agency]
United Rugby Championship
Cardiff (3) 8
Try: A Davies Pen: Sheedy
Leinster (0) 7
Try: McGrath Con: Tector
Cardiff took a huge step towards making the United Rugby Championship play-offs by ending Leinster's winning streak at a rain-lashed Arms Park.
The Blue and Blacks climbed to third in the table by recording their first win against the Irish province since January 2022.
The hosts led 3-0 at the break in horrendous conditions and went into the final quarter 8-0 to the good thanks to scrum-half Aled Davies' counter-attack try.
Leinster struck with a converted try by their scrum-half Luke McGrath in the 68th minute and suddenly Cardiff, down to 14 men after a yellow card for Jacob Beetham, were creaking.
However, they held on and killed the clock expertly to end the champions' winning run in all competitions at 11 games.
Cardiff are level on points with second-placed Leinster and crucially have a 15-point lead over those aiming to break into the top eight.
Testing conditions meant the only score of the first half came through the boot of Callum Sheedy, with the Cardiff fly-half knocking over a 19th-minute penalty.
The Blue and Blacks were left to rue the lack of a cutting edge in the 22, especially when Leinster had a spell down to 14 men courtesy of a yellow card for Charlie Tector for a high and late hit on Ben Thomas.
Tector had been introduced after just three minutes when the Irish province lost fly-half Harry Byrne, their only player released from Six Nations duty, to a head injury.
That was an enforced change but four of his fellow replacements – including former France tight-head prop Rabah Slimani and giant South Africa lock RG Snyman – were introduced by Leo Cullen with four minutes of the first half to play.
Robbie Henshaw toured with the Lions in 2017 and 2021 [Getty Images]
Cardiff continued to have the territorial edge at the start of the second half, despite playing into the wind, and Davies came up with a key score in the 54th minute.
Jimmy O'Brien failed to find touch with a clearance and the scrum-half ran a good supporting line to finish off the counter-attack, sparked by Cam Winnett and Mason Grady, from flanker Dan Thomas' pass.
Leinster trailed 8-0 and needed to respond, with their hopes boosted by a yellow card for Cardiff wing Beetham on 65 minutes after he was tempted into a deliberate knock-on.
Two minutes later the visitors were over when scrum-half McGrath finished off after a line break and neat offload by replacement full-back Andrew Osborne.
Tector added the simple extras to make it a one-point game but Cardiff held their nerve to earn a vital, and deserved, victory.
Cardiff coach Corniel van Zyl said: "We adapted well to the conditions because it was easier to play without the ball, so the kicking came into play.
"Leinster are a quality outfit with what they have done over the years and it was good chance for us to measure ourselves. I was pleased with the game plan and how things unfolded."
Leinster head coach Leo Cullen said: "I thought that Cardiff deserved the win.
"I am disappointed for our guys, there was lots of good effort and intent but we could get into the game. That was because Cardiff were better with their kicking strategy."
How they lined up
Cardiff: Winnett; Beetham, Millard, B Thomas, Grady; Sheedy, A Davies; Barratt, Belcher (capt), Sebastian, McNally, Nott, Lawrence, D Thomas, Basham.
Replacements: D Hughes, Southworth, Assiratti, Thornton, E Rees, Mulder, I Lloyd, Bowen.
Jersey Bulls have not conceded a goal for three games [BBC]
Jersey Bulls boosted their play-off hopes with a 1-0 win at Sevenoaks Town in Isthmian League South East.
The islanders, who are unbeaten in 2026, move back into fifth place after a third win in four games.
They are two points clear of sixth-placed Faversham Town, who have three games in hand, while Bulls have played at least two more games than the rest of their rivals.
James Queree gave the Jersey the perfect start as he put his side 1-0 up with a fourth-minute penalty after Toluope Jonah was penalised for handball.
It proved to be the decisive moment of a game with few clear-cut chances as Lorne Bickley twice went close in the opening half hour for the Bulls.
Miguel Carvalho forced an excellent close-range save from home goalkeeper Jordan Perrin after he had spilled Toby Ritzema’s 34th-minute shot.
Perrin produced another excellent save to keep the Oaks in the game as he acrobatically tipped substitute James Sunley’s venomous strike over the bar 18 minutes into the second half.
The hosts failed to trouble Euan van der Vliet in the Jersey goal as Bulls kept a third successive clean sheet.
The Denver Broncos have started making restricted free agent decisions — and more are on the way.
News broke on Friday that the Broncos will place a second-round tender on cornerback Ja’Quan McMillian. He will now earn $5.811 million in 2026, and a second-round price tag could prevent other teams from attempting to make an offer Denver can't match.
Meanwhile, Denver has opted not to place a tender on running back Jaleel McLaughlin, allowing him to hit free agency instead. The cheapest tender would have been $3.547 (more than J.K. Dobbins earned last season), so it's no surprise that the Broncos did not want to bring him back at that price.
Denver also has four other restricted free agents: offensive lineman Alex Palczewski, tight/end fullback Nate Adkins, tight end Lucas Krull and defensive lineman Matt Henningsen. Of those players, Palczewski seems like the strongest candidate for a tender, but none of them are guaranteed.
Broncos' other restricted free agents
OL Alex Palczewski
TE/FB Nate Adkins
TE Lucas Krull
DL Matt Henningsen
Even if these players do not receive a tender and hit free agency, the Broncos could still attempt to bring them back for less than $3.54 million. Palczewski should be a priority, and Adkins also has a strong chance to return in 2026.
When: 3:30 p.m. Saturday Where: Allianz Field Stream: Apple TV Radio: KSTP-AM, 1500 Weather: 18 degrees, overcast, 8 mph south wind Betting line: MNUFC plus-105; draw plus-265; Cincinnati plus-210
Form: MNUFC (0-0-1, 1 point) earned a 2-2 draw with Austin FC in the season opener after Kelvin Yeboah scored in the 90th minute last Saturday. Cincinnati (1-0-0, 3 points) got two second-half goals for a 2-0 win over Atlanta United last week.
Big question: Will the stars play?
MNUFC midfielder James Rodriguez completed his first full week of training this week and head coach Cameron Knowles said the Colombian star will be available to make his MLS debut. Knowles said James’ first game for Minnesota is not inevitable this weekend and his possible role will be determined how the game plays out and what it needs. A role off the bench seems most likely.
Cincinnati midfielder Evander subbed out of the season opener with an apparent hamstring injury, but coach Pat Noonan didn’t rule out the one-name Brazilian for this weekend.
Context: It will be one of the coldest home games in Loons’ history and Knowles knows his team needs give fans a reason to bundle up and endure the weather.
“One, to be very difficult to breakdown, and two, to entertain,” Knowles said. “… It’s going to be cold. We want to give them energy as much as they give it to us.”
Check-in: For late February, Allianz Field’s natural grass surface got positive reviews from Knowles and captain Michael Boxall.
“The pitch is in fantastic condition considering the time of year,” Knowles said.
Comment: Knowles expressed support for former Loons manager Eric Ramsay, who was fired by West Bromwich Albion earlier this week. Ramsay was winless in nine total games for the club in the English second-tier.
“He’s a fantastic person and obviously a fantastic coach and hopefully his next opportunity is a good one for him,” Knowles said.
Scouting report: The Loons conceded two goals last week — one on a corner kick and one on a back-post finish. They will need to clean up its defensive issues against striker Kevin Denkey. The former Cercle Brugge player had 15 goals in MLS last season and one already this campaign.
Prediction: Cincinnati finished second in the MLS’ overall standings last season and appear to be ready for another top-tier season. But what the heck, let’s predict pure cinema: Minnesota gets a winning-goal contribution from James’ left foot in crunch time. Loons win 2-1.
GREEN BAY – It didn’t take special-teams assistant Cam Achord long to convince Green Bay Packers coach Matt LaFleur he should replace Rich Bisaccia as the team’s special-teams coordinator.
Achord was the last of a series of interviews LaFleur conducted in Green Bay with candidates seeking the coordinator position.
PackersNews confirmed that LaFleur chose Achord after interviewing him Friday, Feb. 27. ESPN and NFL Network were the first to report LaFleur’s decision.
Achord, a former New York Giants assistant and New England special-teams coordinator beat out Seattle’s Devin Fitzsimmons, Arizona’s Sam Sewell and San Francisco’s Colt Anderson, all of whom also interviewed with LaFleur this week.
New England coach Bill Belichick hired Achord as a special teams assistant in 2018 and promoted him to coordinator in 2020. Achord’s units ranked No. 1 in Rick Gosselin’s annual special-teams ranking in 2020.
In 2022, the Patriots finished 32nd in special teams DVOA, which is a performance measure of every special-teams play compared to the NFL’s average performance. In ’23, they gave up three kick-return touchdowns and in ’24 they ranked 28th. In Gosselin’s rankings, the Patriots fell to 18th in 2021, 16th in 2022 and 13th in 2023.
Achord was not retained when Jerod Mayo replaced Belichick as head coach.
The Giants hired Achord as an assistant under coordinator Michael Ghobrial in 2024.
LaFleur was caught by surprise when Bisaccia resigned Feb. 17. By the time Bisaccia stepped down, every special-teams coordinator position in the league had been filled and it left LaFleur with a small field from which to choose.
Bisaccia was well-liked among Packers players but his units did not perform consistently well. The Packers stuggled in their kicking game and never were able to win field position with their return game.
Much has been made about Oregon Ducks tight end Kenyon Sadiq's talent on the field, as he's far and away the top tight end in the 2026 draft class. Considering his athleticism, there's high anticipation and excitement for how he'll perform during testing, if he chooses to do so in Indianapolis at the NFL Combine.
But it's something else that's stuck out thus far during his time at the combine.
"He’s walking into interviews and explaining exactly what everybody else's assignment is," NFL Network's Mike Garafolo said. "I had one guy say 'it was the best interview I've ever had.'"
At the combine, players are picked apart by not only the media, but more importantly by NFL teams. Private interviews are conducted, where players meet with team coaches and executives. It's essentially a meet and greet with some high-level football analysis and film breakdowns mixed in.
Mike Garafolo on Oregon TE Kenyon Sadiq’s interviews:
"He’s walking into interviews and explaining exactly what everybody else's assignment is. I had one guy say 'it was the best interview I've ever had.'" pic.twitter.com/fokf8zYV9F
And, per Garafolo's words, Sadiq's football acumen and IQ has been on full display, impressing teams along the way with his deep knowledge of the Oregon playbook. He has a quiet nature about him, but when prodded by NFL teams, it appears that Sadiq is blowing the interviews out of the water.
On Thursday, former Ducks safety Dillon Thieneman lauded the Oregon program for developing him in 2025 after transferring in after two standout seasons at Purdue. Though all of his counting stats dropped, his open-field tackling — a weakness in his game, per his own words — improved greatly, to the point where Thieneman feels like he excels at that part of the game.
Though Sadiq was at Oregon for all three seasons, it's clear that the program that head coach Dan Lanning is conducting is preparing players for the next level — with both on-field ability and the cerebral part of the game.
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.
Achord, 39, was most recently the assistant special teams coordinator of the New York Giants, a job he held for two seasons under coordinator Michael Ghobrial. The Giants did not retain Achord after hiring John Harbaugh as head coach this offseason.
Achord got his start in the NFL under future Hall of Fame coach Bill Belichick, who hired him to his staff in New England in 2018. Achord spent two seasons as an assistant special teams coach under Joe Judge with the Patriots before taking over the coordinator job in 2020 when Judge left to become the Giants head coach.
In Rick Gosselin's respected special teams rankings, Achord's Patriots finished first in the NFL in 2020, 18th in 2021, 16th in 2022 and 13th in 2023. By DVOA, the Patriots ranked No. 1 in 2020, 18th in 2021, 32nd in 2022 and 28th in 2023 -- suggesting a sharp downturn after a league-best finish to start his career as a coordinator.
Achord wasn't retained by the Patriots when the franchise transitioned under Jerod Mayo in 2024.
Achord beat out Cardinals assistant Sam Sewell, Seahawks assistant Devin Fitzsimmons and Saints assistant Kyle Wilbur for the job.
In Achord, the Packers are getting a young but experienced coordinator who has run the third phase in the NFL previously.
Achord was an assistant in New England when the Patriots won Super Bowl LII following the 2018 season.
Bisaccia stepped down as the Packers special teams coordinator on Feb. 17.
Funmi Fadoju and her London Pulse team-mates took control against Manchester Thunder as the game wore on [Getty Images]
London Pulse showed a "no-mercy mindset" as they got their Netball Super League title defence off to a winning start with a 56-51 victory over Manchester Thunder at the Copper Box Arena.
Having been edged out in last week's season-opening Netball Super Cup final by Loughborough Lightning, a dominant third and fourth-quarter showing enabled the home side to stretch out what had been a two-point lead at the halfway point.
Player of the match Halimat Adio hailed Pulse's "slick" display.
"It's crazy to say it, but we had a no-mercy mentality today," she said. "We want to finish off where we finished off last season.
"We want to win and we have to start that from the get-go. I think everyone did that.
"Obviously last week was really disappointing for us, but there are building blocks.
"This year the teams are really, really strong. So we need to do our homework and I think we'll be all good."
Pulse coach Sam Bird said the game had "ebbed and flowed" with Thunder scores in the last two minutes narrowing the gap to grab a league table point for finishing within five points of their opponents.
Bird's Thunder counterpart, Karen Greig, predicted it would be "a good two or three rounds" before her side find their feet despite "lots of positives".
How to follow 2026 Netball Super League on BBC Sport
BBC Sport will show one game per week during the regular season.
These are the games you can watch live on the BBC Sport website and iPlayer:
28 February: London Mavericks v Nottingham Forest (14:00 GMT)
7 March: Manchester Thunder v London Mavericks (17:00 GMT)
15 March: Nottingham Forest v Leeds Rhinos (16:00 GMT)
22 March: London Pulse v Nottingham Forest (18:00 GMT)
28 March: Loughborough Lightning v Birmingham Panthers (18:30 GMT)
4 April: London Pulse v Birmingham Panthers (17:00 BST)
11 April: Dragons v Birmingham Panthers (16:00 BST)
18 April: Loughborough Lightning v London Mavericks (18:00 BST)
Televised games in weeks 9-14 will be announced at a later date.
Every year at the NFL Scouting Combine, there is at least one or two prospects at every position who make you and the Philadelphia Eagles lean forward a little more than the others. That isn't always because they have blazing 40 times. It isn't always necessarily because of viral clips or highlights. Sometimes, it happens because the résumé reads differently.
Welcome to a conversation about former Oregon Ducks standout Bryce Boettcher. A two-time Second-team All-Big Ten nod (2024, 2025), he won the Burlsworth Trophy in 2024. That's an honor given to the most outstanding FBS college football player who began his career as a walk-on.
In 2025, he was also named a First-team All-American. He's a defensive tone-setter. Oh, and by the way, he's also a legitimate pro baseball talent. Boettcher was selected in the 13th round of the 2024 MLB Draft by the Houston Astros as a center fielder. That's proof that his athleticism isn't just football fast. It's a track-the-ball-over-your-shoulder skill set for someone who is also and close-on-a-gap-in-a-hurry fast.
According to reports out of Indianapolis, Boettcher has met informally with both the San Francisco 49ers and the Eagles. That alone makes his name worth circling.
Oregon LB, Bryce Boettcher, who was drafted in the 13th round of the 2024 MLB Draft as a center fielder has met informally with the San Francisco 49ers and Philadelphia Eagles.
Might the Eagles show Bryce Boettcher some serious interest?
Let's address the elephant in the room. The Oregon-to-Philadelphia pipeline hasn't exactly produced glowing returns. Casey Matthews never fully found his footing in midnight green. Kiko Alonso is best remembered as theguy Chip Kelly shipped LeSean McCoy off to acquire.
Both tenures are remembered more for inconsistency and infamous on-field moments than for sustained impact. So yes, Eagles fans are allowed to be skeptical when the Ducks label pops up, but that's hardly a reason to hold anything against Boettcher.
Here's the mature take. Helmets don't make players. Traits do. Boettcher brings range, closing speed, and the kind of multi-sport competitiveness that usually translates to special teams value at minimum and defensive upside at best.
In today's NFL, linebackers who can run and cover ground are in demand. Add baseball instincts, tracking angles, body control, and reaction time, and you have a developmental piece with real intrigue.
Is this a Day 1 headline selection? The truth is, he probably isn't, but these are the types of prospects smart teams quietly stack.
C.J. Stroud — at least for the most part — has stayed out of the spotlight this offseason following the Houston Texans' divisional round loss to the New England Patriots, but everyone has to step outside the house every once and while.
The two young quarterbacks have known each other since middle school, when they both played in Snoop Dogg’s youth football league. Young, a Heisman Trophy winner, would go on to start two seasons at Alabama under Nick Saban while Stroud committed to Ohio State, guiding the Buckeyes to a College Football Playoff semifinal.
The Texans and Panthers could be two of the best young teams moving into 2026. Young guided Carolina to its first playoff berth in eight years and nearly defeated the Los Angeles Rams in the wild-card round. Stroud, who struggled in the divisional round, once again secured a playoff bid for the Texans, leading them past the Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday night football.
UFC Fight Night 268 ceremonial weigh-ins are in the books, and the fighters came face-to-face before Saturday's event.
The weigh-ins took place at the UFC host hotel in Mexico City, which is nearby Arena CDMX, which hosts the card (Paramount+)
UFC Fight Night 268 is built around a flyweight headliner featuring Mexico's own Brandon Moreno (23-9-2 MMA, 11-5-2 UFC), who looks to prove he is still an elite contender against hungry replacement opponent Lone'er Kavanagh (9-1 MMA, 2-1 UFC).
Check out the video above to see highlights of the weigh-in staredowns from the 13 scheduled bouts at UFC Fight Night 268.
Siena coach Terry Primm, center, and the Saints can guarantee themselves a spot in the MAAC Tournament quarterfinals with a win Saturday against Marist. (Stephen Weaver)
The Siena women's basketball team closes the regular season on Saturday afternoon against Marist at UHY Center with a first-round bye in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Tournament on the line.
If the Saints (12-16 overall, 10-9 MAAC) beat the Red Foxes, they'll earn a bye into the quarterfinals next Saturday at Boardwalk Hall in Atlantic City. If Siena loses, it could still get a first-round bye based on other results, but could also slip into needing to play a first-round game next Thursday at Boardwalk Hall.
"There are just things we want to be able to do better in each possession," Siena coach Terry Primm said. "We know that when we do those things, it's going to equate to wins. Of course, winning Saturday puts us in a great position with that first-round bye, which I think we've had the last, maybe, four years."
Siena hasn't had to play a first-round game since 2021.
Siena helped its chances by beating Rider 67-55 on Thursday night in Lawrenceville, N.J. to snap a four-game losing streak. The Saints enter Saturday in a three-way tie for fifth with Mount St. Mary's and Sacred Heart.
The top six seeds get first-round byes in the MAAC Tournament.
Saturday's 2 p.m. game will also be Senior Day to honor graduate guards Garrisen Freeman and Jamariah Turner. Freeman, a CSU Bakersfield transfer, and Turner, a Stillman transfer, each played one season at Siena.
Graduate guard Valencia Fontenelle-Posson of Guilderland won't participate in the ceremony. She has a year of eligibility left after losing two seasons to knee injuries. She's concluding her fifth season with the Saints.
"They call me Grandma," Fontenelle-Posson said. "Next year, I'll be Great Grandma. I'm accepting my role to be a leader."
In Thursday's win over Rider, Fontenelle-Posson matched her season high with 15 points and freshman Kaiya Rain Tucker had 13 points and a career-high 17 rebounds. Tucker is averaging 11.7 points and 11.8 rebounds over Siena's last eight games.
Ninth-place Marist (11-18, 8-11) is locked into a first-round game in Atlantic City. The Red Foxes are coming off a 48-45 win at Saint Peter's on Thursday night.
The Arizona high school softball season is underway. Here is The Arizona Republic's preseason All-Arizona team, with each of the 12 players in early running for Player of the Year. The Republic's final All-Arizona team and player of the year will be presented after this season based on overall performance, so names could change.
In the meantime, vote in our poll for the player on this list you think should be preseason No. 1. The poll closes at 6 p.m. on Thursday, March 5. Print readers can find the poll online with this story at azcentral.com/sports/high-schools.
The Republic's Preseason All-Arizona softball team
Lilly “Goose” Goodwin, Desert Mountain, P, Sr.
One of the top players in the nation who has signed with Northwestern, she's the best in the circle with a changeup that is virtually unhittable. She's put up career numbers that might not be matched for a long time, leading the Wolves through a 5A dynasty.
Emma Reynolds, Queen Creek, SS, Jr.
She's a hitting machine and a tremendous infielder with a strong arm and great range. Has a combination of power and speed. One of the toughest hitters in the nation to get out.
Payton Westra, Red Mountain, OF, Sr.
Signed with Oklahoma. Highly ranked nationally by Softball America, she was part of the gold-medal winning WBSC Under-18 World Cup Finals. She hit an incredible .755 for the Lions last year.
Torynn Slaughter, Pinnacle, C, Sr.
This Alabama commit earned MaxPreps honorable mention honors last season when she hit .459 with 10 home runs and 27 RBIs. Played on the AZ Rising PGF championship team.
Avery Gehrke, Desert Mountain, SS, Sr.
She is one of the state's best-hitting shortstops, who has been a key to the Wolves' dynasty on the diamond.
Angie Falls, Xavier Prep, P, Jr.
She pitched the Gators to the 6A title last year, when she was 12-1 with a 0.30 ERA with 191 strikeouts in 93 innings. She also hit .402 with 37 hits and 30 RBIs.
Makay Fraley, Valley Christian, P/1B, Jr.
She was first-team all-state last year and her region's Offensive Player of the Year. She has committed to Harding University.
Madison Kirby, North Canyon, SS, So.
Despite the team's struggles, Kirby had a great freshman season, hitting .625 while facing top pitching.
Sariah McNabb, Xavier Prep, INF, Jr.
One of the best fielding infielders in the state, she's also a top hitter. She hit .512 with 38 runs and 42 hits to go with 33 RBIs last season.
Kelsey Rolls, Canyon del Oro, C, Sr.
One of the best players in Southern Arizona for a well-established powerhouse program, she is a great defender who hits over .300.
Ava Briski, Desert Vista, 2B, Sr.
She's an Alabama commit who can play nearly every position. Great utility player who hits for average and power. Big key to Thunder's fortunes this year.
Sydnee Williams, Sandra Day O'Connor, OF, Sr.
She has a career batting average over .500. A four-year starter for the Eagles who had 63 hits as a freshman and 56 hits, including 11 home runs, as a junior.
Richard Obert has been covering high school sports since the 1980s for The Arizona Republic. Catch the best high school sports coverage in the state. Sign up for Azcentral Preps Now. And be sure to subscribe to our daily sports newsletters so you don't miss a thing. To suggest human-interest story ideas and other news, reach Obert at richard.obert@arizonarepublic.com or 602-316-8827. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter:@azc_obert
The Oklahoma Sooners have a pair of gems in their 2027 recruiting class. And the two players committed on the same day. Cooper Hackett and Kaeden Penny committed to the Sooners early in the fall, and in the latest Rivals rankings update, both are considered top-five offensive tackles in the 2027 class.
And both players hail from the state of Oklahoma.
Hackett, out of Fort Gibson, came in at No. 6 overall in Rivals' latest update and ranks as the No. 2 offensive tackle in the class. Penny, from Edmond, ranks No. 20 overall and is the No. 4 offensive tackle in the class.
The pair are the headliners in a class that has 13 players committed and ranks No. 3 in Rivals team recruiting rankings but No. 1 in the Rivals Industry team rankings.
In addition to Hackett and Penny and the No. 86 prospect in the class, Keldrid Ben, the Sooners are in the mix for several other top-100 prospects like cornerback Gabriel Osborne, linebacker Cooper Witten, Bode Sparrow, edge rusher Prince Goldsby, and cornerback Juju Johnson.
Oklahoma has made a significant investment in offensive line recruiting in recent years. They landed top 10 offensive tackles Michael Fasusi and Ryan Fodje in the 2025 class. In 2026, offensive lineman Deacon Schmidt was a big win for Bill Bedenbaugh. In the 2027 cycle, the Sooners look to have their cornerstone offensive linemen of the future in Hackett and Penny.
Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X (formerly known as Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions.You can also follow John on X @john9williams.
After visiting Iowa City for an official visit on Feb. 20, five-star power forward Nation Williams has listed Iowa women's basketball among her Top 10 schools that the highly-touted 2027 recruit will be considering.
Williams, a 6-foot-2 native of Las Vegas, Nevada, currently stars for Centennial High School, where she is ranked as the No. 10 player nationally, the No. 1 power forward, and the No. 1 player in Nevada, according to 247Sports' Composite for the 2027 recruiting class.
Williams was among the eight other Hawkeye recruits and prospects in attendance for Iowa's 62-44 upset win over then-No. 5 Michigan from a sold-out Carver-Hawkeye Arena on Feb. 22, and appeared to enjoy every second of her interactions with the coaching staff, players, and passionate community.
So far in her junior season with Centennial, she is averaging 17.3 points, 10.4 rebounds, 3.5 assists, 2.8 steals, and 1.5 blocks per game, shooting 54% overall and 50% from 3-point range, according to MaxPreps.
In addition to Iowa, the nine other programs that comprise Williams' Top 10 are Duke, Louisville, Baylor, LSU, North Carolina, Notre Dame, and Big Ten foes Michigan, UCLA, and Washington.
While Iowa is joined by an elite group of programs competing for Williams' commitment, her star-studded experience in Iowa City this past weekend likely cemented the Hawkeyes' status in her Top 10 schools.
As of Feb. 27, the only commitment to the Hawkeyes' 2027 recruiting class is top-ranked Wisconsin combo guard Jada Seubert.
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
The tight ends officially checked in at the 2026 NFL Combine in Indianapolis, giving evaluators verified size profiles before on-field testing begins. For the position, length, and mass matter. Arm length affects catch radius and blocking surface area, while overall frame often determines whether a prospect projects as an in-line Y, move tight end, or flex option.
Below are the official measurements for the tight ends who weighed in.
Player
School
Height
Weight
Arm Length
Hand Size
Lake McRee
USC
6'4"
243
31 1/2"
9 1/4"
Riley Nowakowski
Indiana
6'2"
250
31 1/2"
8 3/4"
Eli Raridon
Notre Dame
6'6"
245
32 3/4"
10 3/4"
DJ Rogers
TCU
6'4"
258
33 5/8"
9 1/2"
Sam Roush
Stanford
6'6"
267
30 5/8"
10"
Joe Royer
Cincinnati
6'5"
247
31 1/2"
10 3/4"
Bauer Sharp
LSU
6'5"
249
31 3/4"
9 3/4"
Eli Stowers
Vanderbilt
6'4"
239
32 5/8"
9 3/4"
Michael Trigg
Baylor
6'4"
240
34 1/4"
10 1/2"
Dae'Quan Wright
Ole Miss
6'4"
246
32 1/4"
9 1/4"
Tight End Size Notes
Tallest Tight Ends
Eli Raridon and Sam Roush both measured 6'6"
Heaviest Tight End
Sam Roush at 267 pounds
Longest Arms
Michael Trigg at 34 1/4"Elite length for the position.
Largest Hands
Eli Raridon and Joe Royer at 10 3/4"
Shortest Tight End
Riley Nowakowski at 6'2"
Average Tight End In This Group
Height around 6'4" to 6'5"
Weight around 245 to 250 pounds
Arm length around 32 inches
Prospects clearing 33-inch arms typically project well as in-line options, while lighter 240-pound range players often profile as move-tight ends.
The players on the U.S. Olympic hockey teams don't deserve this.
Instead of simply being paraded in the Red, White and Blue, our two gold medal-winning hockey teams are being pilloried in the tiresome refrain of Red vs. Blue.
We should be celebrating the first Mexican-American to win an Olympic gold medal — against Canada, no less — not debating whether Maple Leafs fans will boo or cheer him in his first NHL game back.
Every one of Matthews' U.S. teammates shouldn't have to answer for President Donald Trump’s congratulatory locker-room phone call that included comments about the women’s team. They shouldn't be called a "clown" by Megan Rapinoe, and "Miracle on Ice" hero Mike Eruzione shouldn't feel compelled to blast the people criticizing the men's players.
We’ve forced our nation's Olympic heroes into the impossible position of having to pick a side in the culture war both major political parties allowed to foment over the past decade. These are hockey players who won gold medals at the Olympics, not statesmen returning from abroad. These are issues that go far beyond a president's phone call, or a State of the Union appearance.
"The team that wins the Stanley Cup every year accepts the White House invitation to go," Matthews told reporters earlier this week. "I just think it's something that you do because we are proud Americans and whatever your political beliefs may be, hopefully something like this will bring more unity to the country. But for us, we believe it's a great honor no matter who is in office."
So much for bringing people together.
Blame Trump for bad joke, not Team USA
Is part of the problem that the current media landscape values controversy over nuance? You bet. What’s actually newsworthy too often takes a back seat to what’s trending. A standing ovation for Jack Hughes isn't just celebrated as a show of appreciation and patriotism anymore. It's viewed through the prism of left and right that overtook this hockey game over the past week.
But that’s not fair to these players, who really did nothing wrong other than, in a split-second, elect to laugh at a crude, unfunny joke the president never should have made when he called to congratulate them. It's hard for me to hold that against them, to allow it to diminish that they're the first U.S. men's hockey team in 46 years to win a gold medal at the Olympics.
Almost a week later, ever since Trump’s locker-room call set off an avalanche of opinions here and north of the border, it’s perhaps lost that this controversy boils down to one man’s failed attempt at humor.
Was he trying to crack a sexist joke by minimizing the women’s hockey team’s gold-medal accomplishment while telling the men’s team, “We're going to have to bring the women's team, you do know that?"
Or was he trying to get a laugh at the expense of Democrats when he added, "I do believe I probably would be impeached” if he didn’t invite the women’s team to the White House.
Never mind that it doesn't appear Trump ever called to congratulate the women's ice hockey team when it won a gold medal in overtime against Canada three days earlier. Neither comment he made to the men was appropriate. It was "distasteful," as women's hockey player Hilary Knight correctly put it.
But we’ve collectively spent the days since then somehow trying to make sure what Trump said to the U.S. men's hockey team lingers longer than what the U.S. men's hockey team pulled off in Milan.
See, this never was about whether the men's players should have gone to the White House, or to the State of the Union, to be fêted after an incredible accomplishment. Of course, they should have if they wanted.
This isn’t even about whether Trump should have called the men’s hockey team after its win. Of course, he should have if he wanted. U.S. Presidents have been making those sort of congratulatory calls for decades.
This is about a bad joke, and a group of hockey players who deserve better from us.
For NFL Draft fans, there is nothing quite like the NFL combine. The testing is not much in terms of action, but regardless, it gets you on the edge of your seat for the first time since the Super Bowl.
On Friday, we get to see two position groups on the field with actual testing in the tight ends and defensive backs. Both are positions that the Bucs could use some help at this draft cycle, so we wanted to give you some players to watch today when testing begins at 3:00 p.m. EST on NFL Network.
In this piece, we will focus specifically on defensive backs. It is not the biggest need for the team, given they drafted Benjamin Morrison and Jacob Parrish on day two of the 2025 selection meeting. The team could have a hole to fill if they lose Jamel Dean in free agency, which is why we are highlighting this.
With that in mind, here are five players we are looking forward to seeing test at the NFL combine.
Bud Clark, TCU
One of my favorite prospects from this past year. The instinctive defensive back for the Horned Frogs was a bona fide playmaker for their defense showcased good instincts and movement skills to be in position to make plays. He should be an interesting player to watch test today as a result.
Keith Abney II, Arizona State
Keith Abney II is going to be must-see TV when it comes to the backpedaling drills to illustrate coverage. All season he showcased his footwork and hips to be one of the reasons he can stick with most receivers, not to mention his background as a speed skating national champion doesn't hurt matters.
Brandon Cisse, South Carolina
Brandon Cisse has been getting first-round hype in recent months, but to cement that, he needs to ace his testing. He has the skillset and build to get the team's attention, and the film indicates he should do well on testing. However, if he doesn't do well, he could find himself becoming a second-round pick, which could make him a value.
Domani Jackson, Alabama
One of the more athletic players in the pool of talent in Indianapolis is Domani Jackson out of Alabama. The Crimson Tide defensive back does not have the flashiest of tape, and has some concerns overall that have his draft stock projected to day three. With strong testing, he could creep into the top of day three, or even the back end of day two.
Malik Muhammad, Texas
Malik Muhammad is another player whose film was not the best this past season. But like Jackson, Muhammad has a chance to make folks remember what he is capable of when he tests on Friday. Muhammad right now is shaking on day two ground but could solidify that with some strong testing.
Two title losses has Lopes wondering if a move up to lightweight will help him seek new life in the UFC title picture.
"It's something I've actually been thinking about for a while now," Lopes said of lightweight in a translated interview with Laerte Viana (h/t Championship Rounds). "I've already been talking with the people closest to me, and yes, it's definitely a possibility, but we also have to see what the UFC's plans are, right? So first, I want to sit down, talk to the UFC, see what they have in mind for me, see what they'll tell me, then we'll also give them our opinion from there. But yes, moving up a division is definitely a possibility."
In between his title losses to Volkanovski, Lopes knocked out top contender Jean Silva with a spinning back elbow.
There has been plenty of speculation as to whether new Boston Celtics big man Nikola Vucevic will be starting or coming off the bench for the Celtics. Now attention turns to that question for when star Boston forward Jayson Tatum returns to action from the Achilles tendon injury he picked up in the 2025 NBA Eastern Conference Semifinals.
And while we do not yet have an answer to that particular potential conundrum, we do know how the former Chicago Bulls center feels about coming off the bench for Boston at the moment. "When I got to Boston and (was) talking to (Celtics head coach) Joe (Mazzulla), he had mentioned that," said Vooch in an interview with NBC Sports Boston. "And in our conversation, I told him I was open to (it)."
"I didn't mind if my role would be different, if I'd come off the bench, if my minutes were different and he just ... asked me to be flexible to start off the bench and see how it goes and figure out the minutes and everything," he added.
"And I told him I was open to that," continued Vucevic "I didn't know that was an issue for me. I knew it would be an adjustment, when you start for so long, you have a certain routine, you go from the warm-up straight to the intro to playing."
"Now it's that you sit on a bench for a little bit and, so it was an adjustment. I think the first game I was just excited to be out there and just wanted to play as hard as I can to help the team. And there was a lot of process, learning the offense, learning the defense, the communication we use, and things like that."
AUBURN — Maybe it's finally clicking for Auburn basketball. Maybe, at least based on the returns in the days following its loss to Oklahoma earlier this week.
The Tigers had a "very spirited" film session Thursday, Feb. 26, head coach Steven Pearl said, to address their issues in the loss to the Sooners. Afterwards, Pearl said Auburn had one of its best practices of the year.
"For us, it's about how do we take that and translate it into a game?" Pearl said. "If we can do that, we'll be way more competitive."
Auburn's undoubtedly scuffling, losers in six of its last seven with a disappointing result at Oklahoma in the aftermath of a dramatic win over Kentucky. After the latest loss, Pearl said postgame he'd need to change how he was coaching the Tigers.
"I got after them pretty good yesterday in film and just addressed some things that I thought needed to be addressed, and they were all phenomenal receivers, and then they went out and had a great practice," Pearl said Friday. "I was probably a little more amped up in practice yesterday than I normally am, just to try and spark some energy into us.
"The good thing was I didn't have to do that. I actually fed off their energy yesterday. They were really good from the get-go, and it got me going. I just think in what we do in film study and what we do in preparation, I've got to be a little more urgent in the things that I'm saying in like, 'This is what we're going to do. This isn't an option. Either, be in these sports or don't play.' And that's what they did yesterday."
The players saw a shift in their head coach, Kevin Overton said, but equally important was a film review of their first matchup with Ole Miss, who they'll face Saturday at Neville Arena.
"Even watching it ... just the connectivity and the will," Overton said. "Everybody's flying around, giving extra efforts, doing jobs that aren't our jobs, studying (film), recovering, being in a stance. Teams I would love to be on, that's the team I saw. I was saying it at the end of practice: I only know the film I just watched. I don't even know if our team is paying attention to me sometimes when I say stuff, but I was emphasizing: I only know the film I just watched. That's the team I know we are. We all know that."
The landscape of regional aviation in Northeast India is poised for a significant transformation following a strategic partnership between the Government of Assam and the Airports Authority of India. A formal Memorandum of Understanding was recently executed to initiate comprehensive feasibility studies for the development of five new greenfield airports. These proposed aviation hubs are strategically planned to be situated in close proximity to prominent tourism sites, ensuring that the natural beauty and cultural heritage of the state are made more accessible to global and domestic travelers. Through this infrastructure development project, a robust framework is being established to support the growing demands of the aviation sector while simultaneously fostering economic growth within the Assam region.
A Strategic Vision for Regional Growth
The agreement was solidified in the presence of high-ranking officials and stakeholders who envision a future where travel across the state is seamless and efficient. It is observed that the primary objective of this collaboration is to identify viable locations that can support modern aeronautical operations without compromising the ecological integrity of the surrounding environments. By focusing on greenfield sites, the opportunity is taken to build facilities from the ground up, incorporating the latest technologies and sustainable practices. The initiative is seen as a pivotal step in the broader mission to integrate remote areas into the mainstream economic map of the country.
Geographic Focus and Tourism Integration
The selection of the five locations for these feasibility studies has been guided by the potential for tourism expansion. It is understood that areas near iconic landmarks and wildlife sanctuaries are being prioritized to ensure that the influx of visitors can be managed through structured aerial routes. By placing airports near these sites, the travel time for international and interstate tourists is significantly reduced. The beauty of places such as Kaziranga or the spiritual significance of various heritage zones is expected to be showcased more effectively once these transit points are operational. The narrative of Assam as a premier travel destination is thus being strengthened through these deliberate infrastructure investments.
The Role of the Airports Authority of India
Under the terms of the signed document, the technical expertise of the Airports Authority of India is being leveraged to conduct detailed assessments. These evaluations involve analyzing the topography, weather patterns, and environmental impact associated with each proposed site. It is required that every technical parameter meets the stringent safety standards set by aviation regulators. The partnership ensures that the burden of technical planning is handled by seasoned experts, while the state government facilitates the necessary land acquisition and administrative support. This synergy between central expertise and state-level execution is regarded as the cornerstone of the project’s potential success.
Economic Implications for Local Communities
Beyond the immediate benefits to the tourism industry, the construction and operation of five new airports are expected to generate substantial employment opportunities. It is anticipated that local laborers, engineers, and service providers will be integrated into the development phase. Once the airports become functional, a secondary economy involving hospitality, transport, and retail is likely to flourish around these aviation hubs. The upliftment of local communities through enhanced connectivity is a recurring theme in the developmental discourse of the state. Passive investment in these regions is projected to result in long-term financial stability for thousands of residents.
Environmental Considerations and Sustainable Development
Since the projects are categorized as greenfield developments, a heavy emphasis is placed on environmental sustainability. It is mandated that the feasibility studies include a thorough review of how these airports will interact with the local flora and fauna. Solutions such as solar energy integration, efficient waste management, and water conservation are being considered during the preliminary planning stages. The goal is to create a network of “green” airports that serve as a model for future infrastructure projects in ecologically sensitive zones. The balance between modernization and conservation is being maintained with great care by the involved parties.
Enhancing Multi-Modal Connectivity
The development of these airports is not viewed in isolation but as part of a larger multi-modal transport strategy. It is intended that these air links will complement existing road and rail networks, creating a comprehensive web of movement across Assam. The ease with which cargo and passengers can transition between different modes of transport is expected to improve the overall ease of doing business in the state. As the regional connectivity scheme continues to evolve, the addition of five new landing strips will provide the necessary redundancy and reach to handle emergency services and medical evacuations more effectively.
Future Timelines and Implementation Phases
Following the completion of the feasibility studies, a detailed project report will be prepared for each site. It is expected that the findings will dictate the timeline for the commencement of actual construction. While the initial phase focuses on data collection and site validation, the subsequent stages will involve architectural design and financial bidding processes. The commitment shown by the state leadership suggests that these projects are being placed on a fast-track trajectory. Constant monitoring of the progress is being conducted to ensure that the vision translated in the Memorandum of Understanding is realized within a reasonable timeframe.
Conclusion and Regional Impact
The signing of this agreement marks a new chapter in the history of Assamese aviation. It is believed that by bridging the gap between major cities and hidden tourist gems, the state is positioning itself as a leader in regional logistics and travel. The passive observation of growing air traffic trends has led to this proactive stance by the authorities. As the studies commence, the eyes of the nation are on this unique collaboration, which promises to redefine how the North East is perceived and accessed. The dedication to building a modern, efficient, and accessible Assam remains the driving force behind every clause of the newly signed pact.
Peter Leven has challenged his Aberdeen players to start a huge week in style by ending their Hearts hoodoo.
The Dons have not won in 13 visits to Tynecastle since May 2017 when Hearts boss Derek McInnes was in charge at Pittodrie.
Victory over the league leaders would be "massive" for Leven's side, who have slim hopes of a top-six finish and host Celtic on Wednesday night before continuing their Scottish Cup defence next weekend at Dunfermline.
"At Tynecastle our record isn't great, but records are there to be broken," said the interim boss.
"We've got players who haven't played there before, so they won't know about that record that's intact.
"We've got to go there with confidence and belief in the squad, and build on it. We've got three amazing games this week with Hearts, Celtic and Dunfermline in the cup.
"Hearts are pushing for the title, but we'll look at what their strengths and weaknesses are, what we can bring to the game, how we can hurt them and how we can nullify their strengths.
"I'm really looking forward to the game and so are the players. It's a difficult venue, but we'll go there, play our way and try to get a result. It's all about us."
Leven strengthened his coaching team this week with the appointment of former Notts County and Forest Green boss Ian Burchnall as first-team coach.
"Stuart Duff had a lot on with the under-18s and Youth Cup, so we were always looking to bring another coach in. Lutz [Pfannenstiel, sporting director] mentioned his name," added the interim manager.
"He's got a great CV, been involved at some amazing clubs, experienced as both an assistant and a manager. He's another good person to have and bounce ideas off."
Schatz sees Dean, a third-round pick of the Philadelphia Eagles from the 2022 draft, as a logical replacement at linebacker with the Packers potentially losing 2022 first-round pick Quay Walker in free agency.
From Schatz: "The Packers are probably going to let linebacker Quay Walker leave after they declined his fifth-year option, which means they need an option to play next to Edgerrin Cooper. Dean is still only 25 years old and arguably stronger than Walker in pass coverage. Dean had four sacks, two forced fumbles and 55 total tackles last season."
Dean was a rookie with the Eagles and played under Gannon, who was previously the defensive coordinator in Philadelphia and will be the new defensive coordinator in Green Bay in 2026.
Dean has pros and cons as a free agent target. He's young (25), an explosive mover and has played high-level football during his first four seasons. He can blitz from the second level and is excellent against the run. That all makes him a good fit for a Packers team that prefers to sign young, ascending players in free agency, and it's impossible to overlook the Gannon connection. However, Dean is also small (5-11, 231) and has a troubling injury history, including a torn pectoral, a Lisfranc foot injury and a torn patellar tendon in his knee. Over four NFL seasons, Dean has played only 1,500 defensive snaps -- and he's only started more than eight games in a season once in four years.
However, it is tempting to imagine the 2024 version of Dean -- who a game-changing player -- operating next to Edgerrin Cooper in Gannon's defense in 2026 and beyond.
What will Dean's market look like? PFF ranks him as the site's No. 11 overall free agent. But not everyone agrees; Justis Mosqueda of Acme Packing Company did a "consensus" free agent ranking, and Dean came in at No. 36, just above Quay Walker at No. 38. Opinions are split, and it's possible an off-ball linebacker with an injury history won't cost a ton on the open market.
The Packers aren't blessed with loads of cap space entering free agency. In fact, the team will need to actively cut down the roster to become cap compliant and have flexibility during March. So, there is little wiggle room for making a mistake on a free agent target.
Elsewhere, Schatz picked the New York Jets for quarterback Malik Willis and the Las Vegas Raiders for linebacker Quay Walker. He did not pick a match for Rasheed Walker or Romeo Doubs, two of the Packers' other top free agents.
The NFL announced the 2026 salary cap figure for the Indianapolis Colts and the 31 other teams.
A month ago, it was reported that the 2026 salary cap would be in the $301.2 million to $305.7 million range. According to Ian Rapoport, the official cap number will be set at $301.2 million.
This is up $22 million from the 2024 season and up nearly $100 million from 2022, when the cap figure was $208.2 million.
NFL clubs were informed today that the salary cap for the ’26 season will jump $22 million per club to $301.2 million. Add in another $77.6m in benefits & that’s $378.8m per club in player spending. Tremendous growth pic.twitter.com/cQ5Zf3aGVW
How much salary cap space do Colts have for 2026 NFL season?
Before this news broke, Over the Cap projected that the Colts had $35.71 million in salary cap space, which ranked as the 13th most in the NFL. That was based on a salary cap figure of $303.5 million.
After doing a little math, we can estimate that the Colts actually have around $33.41 million in available space.
The opportunity for GM Chris Ballard to further reshape the Colts' roster in free agency does seem to exist, given the team's salary cap situation.
When owner Carlie Irsay-Gordon spoke with the media after the season, she mentioned how Ballard adapted his roster-building approach, which included being more aggressive.
Ballard then seemed to acknowledge that continuing down that path was going to be the plan this offseason.
Addressing the defensive side of the ball, specifically, seems to be a big priority for the Colts this offseason.
Vanderbilt women's basketball will end its season facing its biggest rival, Tennessee, while the two teams are going in different directions.
The Commodores (26-3, 12-3 SEC) just finished off their first undefeated home regular season in program history with a win over Alabama at Memorial Gymnasium. They've already secured an SEC tournament double-bye and likely a top-four seed in the NCAA tournament. But pride is on the line at Thompson-Boling Arena in their March 1 matchup (1 p.m. CT, ESPN) where Vanderbilt plays in a place it has only ever won once.
The Lady Vols (16-11, 8-7) have fallen hard after a strong start to SEC play. After the Commodores beat Tennessee twice last season, Vanderbilt has a chance to make a rivalry statement.
The Commodores have the nation's leading scorer, Mikayla Blakes, who averages 26.9 points per game and has scored above 30 points in six of her last seven games. The Lady Vols are led in scoring by Talaysia Cooper (15.9 points per game) and Janiah Barker (13.9 points per game).
Here's our prediction for the matchup:
Tennessee's losing streak
Tennessee has lost five games in a row and six of their last seven. The one win was against Missouri, with losses to South Carolina, Ole Miss, Texas, Texas A&M, Oklahoma and LSU.
The Lady Vols have wins over a few NCAA tournament teams in the first half of their SEC schedule, defeating Alabama and Georgia on the road and Kentucky at home.
But even home court advantage hasn't been a boon for Tennessee during this losing stretch, with losses to Mississippi State, Texas A&M and Texas on its home floor.
History isn't on Vanderbilt's side
Vanderbilt has won in Knoxville one time — in 2019. It was one of the most improbable wins ever for the Commodores, who finished 2-14 in the SEC that season and won just seven games overall.
The gap between the two programs has narrowed. Last season, Vanderbilt beat Tennessee twice in the same season for the first time ever, but neither of those matchups were in Knoxville. One was at Memorial Gymnasium and the other was in the SEC tournament.
The heat is on Kim Caldwell
As things have spiraled a bit for Tennessee, there have been several controversies surrounding the Lady Vols. She called out her team, saying that they "quit" after a loss to South Carolina. Andraya Carter, an ESPN analyst and former Tennessee player, criticized the team on air, saying that it didn't seem like players had belief in the system.
In contrast, Shea Ralph's Vanderbilt team has been largely good vibes. After a win over Alabama, Ralph and players Mikayla Blakes and Sacha Washington talked about embracing playing with joy as they're amid their best season ever.
For the Lady Vols, a win could shift the narrative entirely. But a Vanderbilt win would put the teams on a collision course to potentially play again during the SEC tournament.
How to watch Vanderbilt vs. Tennessee: Time, TV channel, live stream
2026 is a year that could bring some huge opportunities for the New Orleans Saints to build their roster and improve as a franchise back to the levels they experienced from the late 2000s to the late 2010s. The success brought by Drew Brees and Sean Payton was immense, and after a recent election to the Pro Football Hall of Fame for the former, he may be extending his branches to new opportunities.
A recent report from MLB insiders Dennis Lin and Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic indicates Brees could very much be involved in the sale of an MLB franchise. With Brees being a long-time fan of the San Diego Padres, he has reportedly joined forces with Joe Kudla, the owner and CEO of clothing brand Vuori:
Joe Kudla, the owner and CEO of Carlsbad, Calif.-based Vuori, has partnered with Drew Brees, who began his decorated NFL career with the San Diego Chargers, in pursuit of the Padres, according to industry sources who were granted anonymity to speak freely about the franchise’s sale process.
Also mentioned in the report is that there are five total offers at this point in time to purchase the franchise, including one from Golden State Warriors owner Joe Lacob and Chelsea Football Club consortium investor José E. Feliciano. It mentions that Kudla has a previous history with Brees as a workout partner and friend, who helps market for Vuori and attends Padres games.
The price currently being asked for by the San Diego ownership is right around $3 billion, which is why many investment members have to group up nowadays to pool money. If this number is hit, it would be the record for an MLB franchise sale, breaking the previous record from 2020 by $580 million.
In recent years, the Padres have sent out an exceptional number in terms of team payroll, with the MLB having no true cap ceiling. Their estimated luxury tax payroll just for 2026 is set at $268,173,680, and from now until 2032, it is set at $1,137,463,616, validating the projected sale price, given that the stadium, television rights, branding, and other marketable factors will also be added on top.
Brees now has the opportunity to embark on his first professional sporting venture following his NFL career, and will be competing with other large-scale moguls to purchase his favorite baseball franchise.
The NFL confirmed on Feb. 27 that the salary cap for teams in the 2026 season will be set at $301.2 million.
The cap increases from $279.2 million in 2025.
OverTheCap estimates that the Tennessee Titans will have a league-high $94.8 million in cap space heading into the start of the league year next month. OTC's estimation already factors in the recent releases of Lloyd Cushenberry III and Xavier Woods as well as the Jermaine Johnson-T'Vondre Sweat trade which will not be official until the league year begins on March 11.
The legal tampering free agency period begins on March 9.
Tennessee should be able to make strides with its roster this offseason, armed with the league's most cap space and the No. 4 overall pick.
Among AFC South teams, the Colts are in the top half of available cap, while the Jaguars and Texans are both over the cap and have work to do via releases and restructures to provide for resources to use during free agency.
Quarterbacks aren't wired to volunteer for the bench, especially not former first-round draft picks. Never, during his tenure with the Baltimore Ravens, have we heard Lamar Jackson do so. Guys drafted to be the face of a franchise are wired differently. That's why this one hits differently. It appears the Anthony Richardson saga has taken an unexpected but very interesting turn.
Anthony Richardson was the fourth overall selection in the 2023 NFL Draft, but after a series of injuries and subpar performance, his relationship with the Indianapolis Colts has soured. Both sides seem content to move on.
Anthony Richardson's agent told FOX Sports that the young quarterback would welcome the chance to sit behind a veteran like Lamar Jackson as part of his development. The Ravens' two-time MVP and Chiefs' star quarterback, Patrick Mahomes, was cited as a proven leader Richardson could learn from while refining his mechanics and decision-making. Here's why Jackson's name surfaced — and what it says about his standing around the league.
Anthony Richardson’s agent told @FOXSports he would be open to sitting behind a veteran quarterback like Patrick Mahomes or Lamar Jackson to learn from them.
The Colts and Richardson will soon be parting ways after he was selected No. 4 overall in 2023. pic.twitter.com/f51QIwEVqb
Has Anthony Richardson done enough to make the Ravens pay attention?
If you're uninterested, trust us, we totally understand. If an eyebrow raises, we totally understand that, too.
This isn't a player clinging to a starting job at all costs. It's a 22-year-old with rare physical tools acknowledging that he realizes development matters. Richardson seems to understand that being around the right infrastructure could unlock everything scouts once dreamed of.
Baltimore has already built an offense tailored to Jackson's skill set. They've invested in creativity, quarterback-centric design, and flexibility. If Richardson is serious about embracing a developmental season and about refining his footwork, processing speed, and accuracy instead of rushing back onto the field, there may not be a better classroom in the league than the one in Owings Mills.
Naturally, there's a lot that would have to happen for this to transpire. Richardson isn't eligible for free agency until 2027. He has a baked-in fifth-year option that pushes his FA eligibility until 2028. The Colts won't be exercising that option, though.
That means the only way a Ravens acquisition could take place is if Baltimore trades for him or scoops him up if the Colts feel it's more feasible to release him. With Richardson being a former first-round draft choice, that second idea seems unlikely. Perhaps they seek a trade.
It's also worth noting that backup Ravens QB Tyler Huntley is an impending free agent. Meanwhile, Cooper Rush is signed through next season, but he isn't very good. There are reasons to argue for possible Ravens interest and for arguing that Baltimore should avoid Richardson without giving this a second thought.
Statements like these are like smoke. Most never lead to any concerning fires, but given all the hype that has surrounded Richardson at various stages of his career, you certainly see why we would find this all interesting.
What will the impact of Jayson Tatum returning be for the Boston Celtics? The St. Louis native is nearing the end of his long rehab process for the Achilles tendon injury he sustained vs. the New York Knicks in the 2025 NBA Eastern Conference Semifinals, and speculation on how he will be integrated back into the ball club that has found uncanny success in his (and Al Horford, Jrue Holiday, Luke Kornet, and Kristaps Porzingis') absence this campaign.
The team looks quite different, and plays a different style than when Tatum was at the helm, and there is also the whole issue of his costar on the wing Jaylen Brown having a season worthy of winning the league's Most Valuable Player award. What should we expect from the Duke alum returning to the fold?
The folks behind "Havlicek Stole the Pod" put together a clip taking a deep dive on the subject in conjunction with the Ringer's Howard Beck. Check it out below!
Jos Buttler is one of England's all-time white-ball greats – a two-time World Cup winner.
But the 35-year-old has looked horribly out of touch over the past few weeks and his duck against New Zealand was his fifth single-figure score in a row.
He has put in extra net sessions and faced local spinners, padded up against England's options as well as coaches with the dog stick, yet nothing has lifted him from his slump as yet.
Could England really make a change for next week's semi-final?
Here are the options facing England and the issues at play…
Option One: Back him
This remains the most likely scenario – overwhelmingly so.
Captain Harry Brook strongly backed his predecessor after Friday's win over New Zealand, saying "it is exciting to know what he could produce in the next few games".
"There's been a lot said about Jos. He's played 150 games for England and people need to take a little step back," said Brook.
"He's probably the best white-ball player to play the game. He's in a rut but he's got fire in his belly and wants to show people what he's made of.
"He's a phenomenal player and I've no doubt he'll go out and do well."
Brook's faith is unsurprising.
Buttler is the fourth highest run-scorer in T20 international history. He scored 83 from 35 balls against South Africa last September.
But the right-hander has not scored a fifty in any of his 16 international innings this winter and this is now the longest run of single-figure scores in his T20 international career.
Though he has come through lean patches previously, the upturn has not always been immediate.
As England's 50-over World Cup spiralled in 2023, he did not score a fifty and made scores of nine, 15, eight, 10, one, five and 27 as his side exited the tournament.
Option Two: Move him
This would be somewhat of a halfway house.
With Buttler struggling at the top, why not move him down the order where the pressure to score quickly is not as great? He does play the finisher role in 50-over cricket after all.
Buttler has batted at five and six 45 times in T20s for England, though not consistently since 2018.
This change would obviously require someone else to step up to open.
England have various options, given both Tom Banton and Will Jacks are openers by trade.
But Banton was recalled specifically to play a role in the middle order because of his prowess attacking against spin. Jacks has also been England's player of the tournament so far with 191 runs from 108 balls as a finisher and Rehan Ahmed impressed in that role against New Zealand.
Brook and Jacob Bethell have both opened in the Indian Premier League but Brook has just scored a stunning century at number three and Bethell is not the quickest starter.
You could simply swap Brook and Buttler, leaving Buttler to come in at first drop as he was up to the start of last summer for England. He also had a successful IPL at number three last year.
The way Buttler and Phil Salt complement each other in their opening partnership was viewed as one of England's big strengths before the tournament, however.
None of these options are entirely straightforward.
Option Three: Drop him
The most drastic option also appears the least likely.
Buttler, who signed a new two-year central contract last year, has been a mainstay of England's white-ball teams for more than a decade. Could they really leave him out entirely for a World Cup semi-final?
That encounter may be at Mumbai's Wankhede Stadium, where Buttler has made scores of 94 not out, 89 and 116 in the IPL.
Ben Duckett is the spare batter in England's squad - another man struggling for form.
Duckett is averaging 18.88 from 12 matches this winter across all formats and was out for a first-ball duck in his most recent innings at the start of the month.
"Who is writing Jos Buttler off?," said former England spinner Alex Hartley.
"If you are, get a grip. He is one of those players where it takes one shot crunched through the covers and he will be back.
"It would be a worry if England were not winning games. I have no doubt when push comes to shove Jos Buttler will be OK."
Martin O'Neill is not anticipating as many surprises on his 74th birthday as he received when hearing what Sunday's opposition team boss, Danny Rohl, had said before what both hope will be an Old Firm derby celebration day.
Earlier, Rangers' German head coach had responded to Celtic midfielder Luke McCowan's suggestion that "if we're at it, no team in that league touches us" by pointing out that his Ibrox side are two points above the third-placed reigning champions.
Rohl also thought it "will be interesting" to see whether O'Neill restores Kasper Schmeichel in goal after Viljami Sinisalo played so well in Thursday's 1-0 Europa League victory for a much-changed Celtic over Stuttgart.
Expressing surprise at the comments about a tie Celtic lost 4-2 on aggregate, O'Neill said: "So he is picking our team? Well done old Danny. He's only in less than a year.
"I have to laugh. He's made a comment about the picking of our team? Absolutely extraordinary. He hasn't been in Glasgow long.
"There's no need for him commenting on my team."
However, what appeared to get O'Neill most irritated was the Rangers boss' suggestion that: "I was a little bit surprised after 1-0 that they're [Celtic] not trying to win this game, 2-0, 3-0, to have a chance. They keep the result until the end."
The Northern Irishman replied: "He wants to be involved in some of these games.
"I didn't see it like that. We were driven back because they are a very good team and in the top four of the Bundesliga."
All that after Rohl had insisted: "I think, in general, it makes no sense to speak too much about the other side, we have to focus on ourselves."
Hence the battle lines have been drawn for a Glasgow derby that could be of crucial importance to the destination of the Scottish title.
Heart of Midlothian are four points clear of Rangers at the top of the Premiership and Celtic two points further back with a game in hand.
O'Neill does not think the comments will add any fuel to what is usually a fiery fixture.
He should know. Although it will be his first league Old Firm derby since a 2-1 win at Ibrox in April 2005, he has won eight of his last 10 against Rangers, losing just two, and also led them to a 3-1 League Cup semi-final win over Rohl's side in November.
That was in his first spell as interim manager, but Rangers reversed the scoreline at Celtic Park in January, a result that went some way to ushering in his second after the sacking of Wilfried Nancy.
Celtic's first-ever win in Germany came after a 2-1 loss at home to Hibernian dented their domestic title hopes.
"We are running out of games," O'Neill admitted. "We have been trying to catch up for quite some considerable time and we're still trying to do that.
"Losing to Hibs was a setback, but it wasn't mortal and we're still there."
Now he is relishing a "really great fixture" he "never expected" to be involved in again.
"He [Rohl] possesses a fine team over there and it is going to be tough for us to get a result," O'Neill admitted.
"In normal circumstances, you would like the full week to prepare, but we've gone to Ibrox and won before after we have played midweek games."
With Hearts hosting Aberdeen on Saturday, Derek McInnes' long-time leaders could have stretched their advantage over the Glasgow pair before they do battle in Govan, but Rohl insisted "we have to focus on ourselves".
"We are ready," he said. "Do it with a hot heart and a smart mind. If we do this then we have a big chance.
"We have a clear idea of what we want to do. We have also some different solutions, how we can hurt them."
Like Celtic, Rangers suffered a setback last weekend when they drew 2-2 away to bottom side Livingston, coming from two goals down after having twice been behind the previous week when defeating Hearts 4-2.
"My team showed character, big personality in the last couple of weeks," Rohl suggested.
"Also to come back away in Celtic, in the stadium there after 1-0 down, showed that, even if the game goes in one direction, what we don't want, we always have a chance to come back."
Rohl feels he and his side "are on fire" after "a good training week" and feels "the confidence" and "the belief".
"It's a crucial game, but no team will be out after this game because there are still 27 points you can take," he insisted. "It's two matchdays and you are in the title race again.
"It's a crucial one because, when you come closer and closer to the end of the season and there is more and more in, then you know every game is important."
O'Neill, meanwhile, is not putting any significance on the game landing on his birthday.
"I have not celebrated a birthday since I was 49, so it makes no difference to me," he insisted.
Quoting legendary Rangers manager Walter Smith, he simply predicted a feeling of "relief" come the final whistle.
Pick of the stats
Rangers have lost once in 15 outings, away to Porto in Europa League, have won 10 in a row at home by an aggregate score of 32-4, are unbeaten in 13 since losing to Roma in November and remain undefeated at Ibrox domestically this season.
Celtic head across the city to Ibrox unbeaten in six away games since losing to Motherwell in December.
Rangers last won 11 successive home matches within a single season in April 2003 under Alex McLeish – the 11th of which was a win over Celtic.
Celtic have lost seven Premiership games this season, as many as they did in 2023-24 and 2024-25 combined, and last suffered more defeats in a league campaign in 1999-00 – with their eighth defeat that season coming away to Rangers.
Following a 0-0 draw in their last encounter at Ibrox in August, Celtic have not won in four visits to Ibrox since a 1-0 victory in September 2023, but they have only lost one of those.
Rohl could become the first-ever Rangers manager to win both of his first two league Old Firm derbies.
The NFL announced the 2026 salary cap figure for the Jacksonville Jaguars and the 31 other teams.
A month ago, it was reported that the 2026 salary cap would be in the $301.2 million to $305.7 million range. According to Ian Rapoport, the official cap number will be set at $301.2 million.
This is up $22 million from the 2024 season and up nearly $100 million from 2022, when the cap figure was $208.2 million.
NFL clubs were informed today that the salary cap for the ’26 season will jump $22 million per club to $301.2 million. Add in another $77.6m in benefits & that’s $378.8m per club in player spending. Tremendous growth pic.twitter.com/cQ5Zf3aGVW
How much salary cap space do Jaguars have for 2026 NFL season?
Before this news broke, Over the Cap projected that the Jaguars were $13.48 million over the 2026 salary cap. That was based on a salary cap figure of $303.5 million.
With the official number now known, we can estimate that the Jaguars are roughly $15.78 million over this year's cap.
So GM James Gladstone has some work to do in the coming weeks before free agency officially opens on March 11th.
Salary cap space can be created through contract restructures, which pushes a portion of the current year's cap charges to future years, inflating the salary cap hits at that time.
A contract extension in some instances can create space as well, as can veteran cuts, if the player's cap hit is larger than their dead cap hit.
The Jaguars actually have the ability to create quite a bit more space, as we detailed here, it just depends on how aggressive Gladstone wants to be.
Midtjylland will return to haunt Nottingham Forest, a reminder of the chaos which has enveloped the season.
The four-time Danish champions, last season's runners-up, inflicted a devastating blow on Ange Postecoglou in October.
Their 3-2 win at the City Ground in the Europa League group phase damaged the Australian beyond repair, with Forest fans chanting "sacked in the morning" just three weeks into his reign.
This time they arrive in the last 16, with the first leg in Nottingham on 12 March, and will not even face Postecoglou's replacement - with Sean Dyche lasting just 114 days himself.
Current boss, the fourth of the season, Vitor Pereira made six changes as Forest edged past Fenerbahce on Thursday, losing 2-1 at the City Ground to progress 4-2 on aggregate in the play-off round.
He admitted he needed to be mindful of Sunday's trip to Brighton and Forest could be in the Premier League's bottom three if West Ham beat Liverpool on Saturday.
Pereira sidestepped a question about whether the Premier League is the priority over the Europa League but survival is paramount for Forest.
After the first leg against Midtjylland at the City Ground they host Fulham before travelling to Tottenham following the away leg a week later.
It will be a test of Pereira's skills and their squad depth to juggle both competitions late into the season.
If he can do what Postecoglou could not, and beat of Midtjylland, then it could provide the springboard to survival.
"Is this the way to Barcelona?" they repeatedly sang during the course of their side's victory against Qarabag on Tuesday night.
So it proved after Newcastle were drawn with the La Liga leaders in the last 16 of the Champions League.
There is plenty of history in this fixture, whether it is Sir Bobby Robson's links to both clubs or Tino Asprilla scoring an unforgettable hat-trick in Newcastle's win in 1997.
The current generation also know each other pretty well, of course.
Newcastle suffered a narrow 2-1 defeat against Barcelona in their opening game of the league phase at St James' Park back in September.
Although Barcelona dominated possession, as expected, Newcastle players and staff took a lot of belief from their display in the opening half an hour in particular, when the hosts spurned a number of opportunities to open the scoring.
While some supporters would have preferred to face Chelsea, the chance for Newcastle to test themselves against Barcelona, the five-time winners, in the knockout stages is the whole reason the club are in the competition.
The first leg at St James' naturally feels pivotal.
Newcastle would have rather have had the return fixture back on Tyneside but if Eddie Howe's team are to stand any chance of going through, they need one of those nights on home soil before the return fixture at the Nou Camp.
No wonder Howe labelled it a "mouth-watering" prospect.
Liverpool will already know how challenging the trip to Istanbul will be when then face Galatasaray.
Arne Slot's side lost there earlier in the campaign and seeing the way Galatasaray beat Juventus 5-2 in the play-offs is enough to show just how much of a force Okan Buruk's side are at home. Liverpool have played there three times and never won.
That said, they should fancy their chances of doing the job across two legs and it would definitely be a surprise if Liverpool failed to progress after the second leg at Anfield. Even Galatasaray's Victor Osimhen said earlier in the week that he would prefer to avoid Liverpool.
Deal with Galatasaray and the prospect of a quarter-final against Chelsea or PSG is tantalising to say the least. A tie with Chelsea would be a throwback to the Rafa Benitez days when the sides took on each other in the Champions League 10 times in the space of five years.
For Slot though, who repeatedly mentions how close his side came to knocking eventual winners PSG out of the competition last year, taking on Luis Enrique's side would be a chance to deliver a seismic statement in what the Liverpool boss has already described as his most challenging season yet.
On paper, Liverpool will not be fancied to go the distance given the season they've had but this is a side that knows what it takes to reach European finals.
They have a tough draw, with either Bayern Munich, Atalanta, Man City or Real Madrid as potential semi-final opponents. But only a fool would write off the team that has won this competition more than any other English side.
As club legend Ian Rush said on Friday: "If you are going to win it, you have got to beat them all on the way."
Chelsea's draw to face Paris St‑Germain in the last 16 – and their potential subsequent run – is a daunting prospect.
Before the draw, it was simply a question of whether Liam Rosenior's side would face either PSG or Newcastle, with an all‑English tie avoided.
A rematch of this summer's Club World Cup final – and another meeting with the European champions – was pulled out of the hat, opposition Rosenior had already encountered while managing his former club Strasbourg.
PSG, though, are not the force they were at this stage last season.
They struggled to beat domestic rivals Monaco despite their opponents going down to 10 men in both matches in the play‑off round. In addition, PSG's form in all competitions has been patchy since the winter break, including a shock exit to Paris FC in the last 32 of the French Cup.
The draw, at least, avoids the flat prospect of Chelsea playing Newcastle three times in a row, as the Champions League ties would have been sandwiched between a league meeting on 14 March.
It will be interesting to see what Rosenior makes of the draw, ahead of what Opta data suggests is the toughest set of fixtures in their final 11 Premier League matches.
There is also a demanding Champions League pathway mapped out for Chelsea, who could meet Liverpool in the quarter‑finals and then either Manchester City or Real Madrid in a potential semi‑final on the road to the final in Budapest.
The “head of the snake” has keyed the Huskies’ turnaround into a top-10 defensive unit this season with his ball-hawking nature at the point of attack. He leads the team and is top 10 in the Big East with 1.7 steals per game, also helping UConn hold opponents to just 5.8 made 3-pointers per game – eighth-fewest nationally – on 30% shooting. Demary has had 10 games this season with multiple steals, including five in the January overtime win at Providence.
The 6-foot-4, Raleigh, N.C., native was one of five guards and one of two Big East players on the list.
UConn is No. 6 nationally with a 44.6% effective field goal percentage against and has limited opponents to 44.9% from two-point range, which is good for eighth-best in the nation.
The Huskies moved up to No. 9 by KenPom’s defensive efficiency rating after Wednesday’s dominant win over No. 15 St. John’s, in which they held the Johnnies to just 40 points on 19.6% shooting from the field. St. John’s went the final 17 minutes and 28 seconds of that 32-point game without a made field goal and shot just 7% from the field in the second half.
UConn has a top-15 scoring defense, allowing just 65.1 points per game, is No. 14 in field goal percentage defense (36.9%) while leading the Big East in both scoring margin (+13.9) and rebound margin (+5.0).
Demary is looking to collect UConn’s fifth national defensive player award after Emeka Okafor (2003, ’04) and Hasheem Thabeet (’08, ’09) each won twice. UConn retired Okafor’s number on Feb. 18 and inducted Thabeet into its Huskies of Honor on Feb. 14.
Vanderbilt basketball will try to improve its NCAA Tournament resume and SEC tournament position when it travels to Kentucky on Feb. 28 (1 p.m., ESPN).
Kentucky basketball improved offense after Vandy blowout
The Wildcats’ offense bottomed out in an 80-55 loss to Vanderbilt back on Jan. 27 in Nashville. Kentucky has averaged 80 points in six games since.
Watch reserve forward Mouhamed Dioubate (8 ppg, 5.5 rpg) as an X-factor. The Alabama transfer scored 12 points in a 72-63 win against South Carolina with a team-best plus/minus of +16. Kentucky is 5-0 this season when he scores at least 12 points.
Where are Kentucky basketball’s points coming from?
The Wildcats are reaping easy points with their size advantage. They produced their largest rebounding margin, 48-28, against an SEC opponent during the South Carolina win. That translates directly to offense for the Wildcats, who had 18 offensive rebounds. Kentucky led 34-20 in points in the paint and 14-4 in second-chance points.
Vanderbilt outrebounded the Wildcats 43-37 in the teams’ first meeting and they tied (13) in offensive rebounds.
How to watch Vanderbilt vs. Kentucky: Time, TV channel, live stream
Vanderbilt’s Frankie Collins hasn’t returned since his Dec. 17 injury at Memphis, and there are questions about his status on the team. Duke Miles is averaging 14 points in two games since returning from knee surgery rehabilitation.
Kentucky’s Jaland Lowe (shoulder), Jayden Quaintance (knee) and Kam Williams (foot) all missed their ninth straight game when the Wildcats played South Carolina. Lowe is out for the season.
Vanderbilt vs Kentucky prediction
Vanderbilt 78, Kentucky 71.
Tyler Palmateer covers high school sports for The Tennessean. Have a story idea for Tyler? Reach him at tpalmateer@tennessean.com and on the X platform, @tpalmateer83.
Day one of workouts at the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine featured defensive linemen, edge rushers, and linebackers, and a few dudes absolutely made noise.
Inside, Oklahoma’s Gracen Halton was the clear winner. A 36.5-inch vertical at defensive tackle is different. That’s a real explosion, not just “good for his size.” You see that kind of lower-body pop, and you start thinking interior disruptor, not just space eater or lane closer. Penn State’s Zane Durant backed up his tape with a smoking hot 4.75 forty and a 1.66 ten-yard split. That split is what really matters, but it's the combine, so why not celebrate the fast 40-yard dash as well? Texas A and M’s Albert Regis did not dominate any one drill, but he was strong across the board and showed the kind of athletic profile that may have teams rethinking his placement on their draft boards. Great showing from him on day one.
On the edge, Cashius Howell looked like he was shot out of a cannon, and despite his measurements, his burst showed up immediately in drills. Dani Dennis-Sutton confirmed what we already thought about his athletic ceiling. When the movement matches the build, that’s when scouts start nodding in unison.
At linebacker drills, the guys from OSU showed out. Sonny Styles put on a show, with a 4.46 forty and a 43.5-inch vertical, at his size, which is just unfair. That’s not normal movement for a guy of his size. He could be a scary good player at the next level with athleticism and what he's shown on tape. Texas Tech’s Jacob Rodriguez showed elite agility, and Indiana’s Aiden Fisher looked smooth and in control in space. Kyle Louis might not have had the loudest headline numbers, but he moved fast and clean in drills. Sometimes you just trust your eyes, and he definitely passed that test. Also, I wanted to give a shoutout to Jake Golday, who looked awesome in drills and could be a steal as a green dot linebacker post-round two in the NFL Draft.
Look, it's the "NFL underwear olympics", the pads are off, and testing does not replace film, we know this. But when a guy shows up in Indy and confirms the athletic traits you thought were there, along with NFL measurements to match, that’s when the stock really starts climbing. Day one gave us a few defenders who didn’t just participate; they may have made people rewatch the tape.
Ethan Schilte-Brown says it would be "quite a jump" if he was to go from lower-league loan deals to the World Cup with Canada, but insists it is still his "dream".
The defender has featured for Canada's Under-20s and is hopeful he can earn a call-up for this summer's finals.
Schilte-Brown, 20, joined Killie's academy from the youth system of MLS side Orlando City in 2023 and had temporary spells with Canada's Halifax Wanderers, Cumnock, Albion Rovers and Dumbarton before impressing at Rugby Park this season.
Co-hosts Canada will face Iceland and Tunisia in a pair of international friendlies in late March as part of their World Cup preparations.
Prior to the Premiership game at Falkirk on Saturday, Schilte-Brown said: "My main focus is here and just trying to perform well for Killie, but if that's a by-product of what happens here then brilliant.
"That's the dream and it's never far from my thoughts but obviously my full focus is here right now.
"I think the gaffer spoke to them [Canada management team] but again I'm just focused here and I'm not going to read into anything until it's real or until it happens.
"That would be quite a jump [from loan deals]. I try and grow from every situation I am in. I learned a lot from Cumnock, Rovers and Dumbarton. It was really beneficial.
"As a young player, you need to play games. It doesn't do you any good just training all the time and no matter what level it is, there's a massive difference between playing with men and playing youth football, especially the physical side of it.
"You need to learn that if you're going to grow in the game and continue on.
"Playing first-team football is what everyone wants. That's where it's going to prepare you the most so I think it's prepared me.
"If I get called up, it's obviously an honour to get my first call-up, but I think with the World Cup in mind, you want to push on and prove to that manager that you're ready for that next step."
Killie are eight points ahead of bottom side Livingston and two behind St Mirren having played a game more than the Paisley side, but Schilte-Brown remains confident of retaining top-flight status.
He said: "I think there's every chance for us to get the safety. I think we will do it.
"The games that we have coming up are massive for us, especially the game this weekend with a sold-out away end, so just looking forward to it."
The Atlanta Falcons have scheduled their first official top-30 draft visit. According to SI's Justin Melo, the team will host Memphis offensive tackle Travis Burke for an in-person meeting on March 11-12. At 6-foot-9, 315 pounds, Burke has elite size but is a fairly raw prospect.
After spending the 2023 and 2024 seasons at Florida International, Burke transferred to Memphis in 2025. He appeared in 11 games for the Tigers last season.
"Burke is a tall tackle with plus drive-blocking talent for his body type," wrote NFL.com's Lance Zierlein. "He uses flexible hips and ankles, along with well-placed hands, to create leverage at the point of attack. He finishes blocks with good aggression when the opportunity arises."
The Falcons have just five total selections, with their earliest pick coming at No. 48 overall. Burke is considered a Day 3 prospect, so it makes sense that he would be on Atlanta's radar.
Sources from the NFL Combine: The Atlanta Falcons will be hosting Memphis OT Travis Burke on a Top 30 in-person visit on March 11-12.
The team has two quality offensive tackles in Jake Matthews and Kaleb McGary. However, Matthews is 34 years old and the team would be wise to draft someone to develop behind the veteran left tackle.
The 2026 NFL Scouting Combine runs through March 1, with the 2026 NFL Draft kicking off on April 23.
Cruise holidays across Europe are about to change. From the sun-kissed French Riviera to Spain’s busiest maritime hub, new rules will reshape how ships dock and how travellers explore famous cities. These changes, coming into force in 2026, aim to control visitor numbers, protect historic centres and reduce environmental strain.
For cruise lovers, this is not bad news. It is a shift toward smarter, more sustainable travel.
Cannes Sets Strict Passenger Limits
Cannes, one of the Mediterranean’s most glamorous cruise stops, will introduce firm controls from January 2026. Ships carrying more than 1,000 passengers will no longer dock directly in its harbour. Larger vessels must anchor offshore and transfer guests by tender boats.
The city will also limit the total number of cruise passengers allowed ashore each day. Local authorities say the goal is to ease congestion, cut pollution and preserve the charm of the waterfront.
Officials have stressed that cruise tourism remains welcome. However, they believe smaller ships and controlled visitor flows will create a better experience for both residents and tourists.
For travellers, this means checking ship size before booking. It may also mean adding a short boat transfer to the adventure.
Barcelona Reduces Cruise Terminal Capacity
Barcelona, Europe’s leading cruise port, is also reshaping its strategy. The city plans to reduce the number of active cruise terminals in the coming years. By lowering capacity, it hopes to manage peak crowds and encourage longer stays rather than quick day visits.
City leaders want visitors to explore beyond the port area. They hope guests will discover local neighbourhoods, dine in traditional restaurants and stay overnight when possible.
The aim is clear. Tourism should benefit the city without overwhelming it.
Cruise guests may notice fewer ships docked at once. However, this could result in shorter queues, smoother transport and a calmer sightseeing experience.
Nice and the French Riviera Follow Suit
Cannes is not acting alone. Other French Riviera destinations, including Nice, are reviewing ship size limits and visitor caps. Authorities across the region are working together to prevent overcrowding during peak seasons.
The Riviera is known for its beauty and relaxed lifestyle. Leaders want to protect that image. By managing cruise arrivals, they hope to preserve narrow streets, historic squares and coastal views from excessive strain.
For cruise travellers, these coordinated measures may influence itinerary planning. Smaller ships are likely to gain popularity. Boutique and luxury cruise lines could benefit most from these evolving rules.
Amsterdam and Northern Europe Take Action
Northern Europe is also responding to overtourism concerns. Amsterdam has already reduced the number of cruise ship visits and is studying further relocation of terminals away from the city centre.
The Dutch capital aims to cut emissions and limit disruption in residential districts. Similar discussions are taking place in other European ports where cruise arrivals have increased sharply over the past decade.
Environmental standards are tightening too. Many ports are investing in shore power systems. These allow ships to plug into electricity while docked, reducing engine emissions.
This shift reflects a broader move towards cleaner maritime travel.
Why These Changes Are Happening
Cruise tourism has grown rapidly in recent years. After the pandemic pause, demand surged. Mega-ships carrying thousands of passengers became common sights in historic harbours.
While cruise tourism brings jobs and revenue, it also creates challenges. Narrow streets become crowded. Local transport systems strain under pressure. Air quality concerns rise.
Governments and port authorities are now trying to balance economic gains with environmental protection and community wellbeing.
The new rules are not designed to stop cruise travel. They are meant to manage it more carefully.
What Travellers Should Expect in 2026
If you are planning a European cruise for 2026 or later, preparation is key.
First, review ship capacity. Smaller vessels may have easier access to restricted ports.
Second, expect itinerary adjustments. Some ports may limit the number of ships allowed per day. Cruise lines could alter schedules to comply with regulations.
Third, allow extra time. Tender transfers from offshore anchorage may extend shore excursion timings.
Fourth, book excursions early. With visitor caps in place, popular tours may sell out faster.
Finally, consider alternative ports. Many cruise lines are expanding routes to lesser-known destinations. This can provide a richer and more relaxed travel experience.
A New Era for Cruise Travel
The 2026 regulations mark a turning point in European cruise tourism. Cities are prioritising sustainability, heritage protection and local quality of life.
For travellers, this may actually improve the holiday experience. Fewer crowds mean better photographs. Shorter lines mean more time exploring. Cleaner air means a healthier visit.
Cruise holidays will remain one of the easiest ways to see multiple countries in a single trip. The difference is that visits may feel more organised and less chaotic.
The message from European ports is simple. Travel is welcome. But it must be thoughtful.
As the industry adapts, cruise lines are working closely with governments to meet new standards. Innovation in ship design, cleaner fuel technology and itinerary planning will shape the next chapter of cruising.
For global travellers, 2026 is not the end of European cruising. It is the beginning of a smarter, more sustainable voyage.
Plan wisely. Book early. Travel responsibly.
The future of cruising is changing course — and it may lead to an even better journey.
Rangers head coach Danny Rohl was "surprised" Celtic didn't push for more goals against Stuttgart on Thursday night and says it will be "interesting" to see who Martin O'Neill starts in goal for Sunday's trip to Ibrox.
O'Neill made eight changes - including back-up keeper Viljami Sinisalo in place of Kasper Schmeichel - for Thursday night's Europa League play-off second leg in Germany after Celtic were beaten 4-1 in the first leg at Parkhead.
One of the stand-ins, Luke McCowan, fired Celtic in front after 30 seconds with what proved to be the only goal of the game as Celtic bowed out 4-2 on aggregate.
"I think when you see the line-up from yesterday, the starting line-up, then I expect some changes," Rohl said.
"It's normal, they try to use the full squad.
"I was a little bit surprised after 1-0 that they're not trying to win this game, 2-0, 3-0, to have a chance. They keep the result until the end."
Denmark international Schmeichel, 39, has come under fire from Celtic fans for sub-par performances and was even booed in last week's first leg at Parkhead.
Sinisalo kept a clean sheet in Stuttgart and made six saves as Celtic won on German soil for the first time.
"But yeah, it will be interesting as well, the goalkeeper position, what he will do now, let's see," added Rohl.
"But we are prepared, we're focused on ourselves, we also have some interesting decisions to make.
"I know if everyone is available, it's also not easy for me in some positions, because there are more than two or three players who are ready for this game.
"It's a good situation. I like this, my players showed that they are ready, I think this is crucial and let's see what it means on Sunday."
Celtic manager Martin O'Neill has been speaking to the media before Sunday's derby trip to Ibrox to face Rangers.
Here are the main points:
O'Neill responded to Rangers boss Danny Rohl's claim he was "surprised" Celtic didn't push for more goals in 1-0 win in Stuttgart on Thursday night when they won 1-0 but exited the Europa League 4-2 on aggregate. O'Neill says: "He wants to be involved in some of these games. Yeah, I never saw it like that. If we were driven back, it's because they are actually a very, very good team. They're in the top four in the Bundesliga. So yeah, I'm surprised he made a comment like that."
On Luke McCowan's claim that "no team in the league touches us when we're at it", O'Neill says the Celtic midfielder is "entitled to his comments" and he "probably meant we're a fine side when we're playing at our very best".
Rohl also commented on Celtic's goalkeeping situation, saying it would be interesting who starts at Ibrox, and O'Neill says: "He's picking our team? Well done, old Danny. Well done. He's only in less than a year himself. He'll soon know all about it in the next four or five years."
He adds: "Sorry, I have to laugh. He's had a comment about our team? As in the picking of the team? Extraordinary. Absolutely extraordinary. Yeah, he hasn't been in Glasgow long."
O'Neill says there is "no need for him to be commenting on my team" and believes such remarks can "definitely" come back to bite you.
On Celtic's task at Ibrox, O'Neill says: "It will be a difficult game for us but are we capable of winning? Yes we are."
As he prepares to return to Ibrox for the first time in over 20 years, O'Neill says "I never expected that again" and Old Firm derbies are "really great fixtures to be involved in".
O'Neill stresses "I don't think we've ever lost confidence" after the defeat to Hibs last week but admits if there was any belief dented "it is restored" following the Europa League performance in Stuttgart.
Celtic head into the weekend six points behind league leaders Hearts and O'Neill knows "we're running out of games and we're still trying to catch up", adding: "Losing to Hibs was a setback but it wasn't mortal and we're still there."
He says "we've got a lot of players who have gone to Ibrox and won" and "it's up to us to try and emulate that".
O'Neill stresses he has "loads of things to think about" for Sunday's team selection and "we'll have to try and cope" without Auston Trusty after his red card last weekend.
Monday, March 2 (at district champions) – Pendleton County (18-7) at Mason County (17-9), 7; Bishop Brossart (25-7) at George Rogers Clark (26-2), 7; Montgomery County (20-10) at Campbell County (21-6), 7; Bracken County (15-13) at Nicholas County (18-12), 7
Friday, March 6 – Semifinals, 6 and 8
Saturday, March 7 – Final, 7
11th Region
At Eastern Kentucky
Draw TBA
12th Region
At Lincoln County
Draw TBA
13th Region
At Corbin Arena
Draw TBA
14th Region
At Knott County Central
Draw TBA
15th Region
At Appalachian Wireless Arena
Draw TBA
16th Region
At Morehead State
Draw TBA
Jason Frakes: 502-582-4046; jfrakes@courier-journal.com; Follow on X @kyhighs.
The Los Angeles Rams have four picks in the first three rounds of the 2026 draft and could use those selections to make wholesale changes to the roster, both in the short- and long-term. With the Rams teetering on the precipice of a post-Matthew Stafford era, it's critical for the brainstrust of general manager Les Snead and head coach Sean McVay to hit on these four picks, if the team keeps them all.
There are obvious needs the Rams have in this draft, from cornerback and receiver to offensive lineman and maybe even quarterback. That's the direction Pro Football Focus' Bradley Locker went with when he looked at what the "ideal draft haul" would be for the Rams in the first three rounds.
Locker wrote that the Rams would love to come away with cornerback Jermod McCoy, offensive tackle Monroe Freeling, quarterback Ty Simpson and cornerback Treydan Stukes in Rounds 1 through 3.
The Rams’ defense improved to 10th in EPA per play last year, but the team still sat 18th in PFF coverage grade at corner. McCoy (89.6 PFF coverage grade in 2024) would be a perfect fit, especially with Los Angeles hiring former Tennessee defensive backs coach Michael Hunter. In the third round, Stukes (89.5 PFF zone coverage grade) could be another starter off the bat in Chris Shula’s zone scheme.
LA’s offense was arguably the league’s best in 2025, but the Rams are always one step ahead. Freeling could compete with the incumbent Warren McClendon Jr. at right tackle, especially with McClendon only under contract for one more campaign. Furthermore, Simpson (83.1 overall PFF grade) will need time to sit after struggling at the end of his first season as a starter, and learning behind Stafford would be an ideal landing spot.
It sounds like this is how Locker would mock out the first round for the Rams: McCoy at No. 13, Freeling at No. 29, Simpson at No. 61 and Stukes at No. 93. That's not a bad quartet of players in the top 100. McCoy would be a potential starter, Freeling is someone who could develop into a starter quickly, Simpson would be the heir-apparent to Stafford and Stukes would round out the cornerback room regardless of what the Rams do in free agency.
The only glaring issue with this group is the lack of adding a receiver. The Rams could easily swap the Freeling or Simpson pick for another pass-catcher to play behind Puka Nacua and Davante Adams in a win-now season. Otherwise, these picks are more for long-term stability than short-term potential.
Dino Maamria took over as Barrow manager in February [Getty Images]
Barrow manager Dino Maamria has completed his backroom team with the appointments of Simon Ireland and Ali Uzunhasanoglu.
Former midfielder Ireland, who coached alongside Maamria in Burnley's academy while the pair were still playing, has moved from League One strugglers Port Vale to become assistant head coach.
Uzunhasanoglu joins as goalkeeping coach having worked with the new Bluebirds manager at Preston North End, Stevenage and Oldham.
The pair will be in the dugout alongside Maamria and first team coach David Worrall for Saturday's game against Gillingham.
One of the top safety prospects in the 2026 NFL draft that has been linked to the Chicago Bears is Toledo's Emmanuel McNeil-Warren, a potential first-round pick depending on where the safety class pans out this year.
While Ohio State's Caleb Downs is expected to be the first safety taken off the board, McNeil-Warren is a name that has shot up in mock drafts, and could be a big area of focus for the Bears who have both starting safeties, Jaquan Brisker and Kevin Byard, as pending free agents.
On Thursday, McNeil-Warren spoke to reporters at the NFL Scouting Combine and detailed his meeting with the Bears on the first day of everything, noting how much the opportunity means to him. McNeil-Warren represents the third straight year that a standout player from Toledo is projected to be taken early in the draft, with Quinyon Mitchell being drafted 22nd overall in the 2024 draft by the Philadelphia Eagles.
"I've met with them on the first day that I got here," McNeil-Warren said, via CHGO. "It went great, they're all a great coaching staff. Just going into the room with (Al Harris) with great excitement, it's everything. I feel like wherever you're at, if you know how to play ball, they're going to find you. Being at Toledo, working hard every day, trying to keep the motivation that they're going to find me. Toledo is a small school so I work harder than anybody cause Power 5 schools, it's easier to find them."
McNeil-Warren has been named as an All-America selection through several media outlets for his standout 2025 season, and with a standout performance at the combine, he will continue to hear his name as an early first-round pick. It could be a great opportunity for the Bears if McNeil-Warren is available at their pick, although recent chatter around the team sounds as if they may address defensive line before anything else.
Isaiah Salinda is having a week to forget. He opened his week at the 2026 Cognizant Classic in the Palm Beaches with a 6-over 77 and things didn't get any better during Friday's second round.
Well, they briefly did, as Salinda opened with a birdie on the 10th hole. But on the 11th, disaster struck in the form of a quadruple bogey 8 on the par-4 hole.
A wayward drive led to a 50-something-yard punch out and a third that went into the water. His fourth cleared the lake but just missed the green and from 25 feet, he need four more shots to find the jar. Oy.
If that wasn't interesting enough, on the par-3 17th, playing 171 yards on Friday, Salinda missed the green, his ball settling barely in the greenside lake. Like a few others who tried similar shots this week (see: David Ford, Nico Echavarria, K.H. Lee), Salinda took off his shoes and socks and rolled up his pants. He then took it one step further, also taking off his white shirt, when he proceeded to blast away at the ball.
Already 9 over on the week, this didn't help. While his water ball did find the green, he missed the par putt, shirt still not tucked back in. A bogey there dropped him to 10 over, three shots ahead of last-place.
For the first time in school history, the Granite Hills boys soccer team is playing for a CIF-Southern Section championship.
After 27 years without a boys team sport reaching a CIF-SS final, the Cougars will face University High School in the Division 4 boys soccer title match Saturday at 5 p.m. in Irvine.
The breakthrough came Feb. 21, when Granite Hills blanked Indian Springs 3-0 in the semifinals, sending the team to the program’s first championship appearance since the school opened in 1999.
For longtime coach Paul Casarez, the moment was years in the making.
“Man, this is everything. This is one of my most special moments in my entire career at Granite Hills,” Casarez said. “I’ve been here so long but haven’t gotten to the finals. I knew this would be the time. I knew it had to be it.”
Casarez was part of three previous semifinal runs, most recently in 2018 on a team that included his son, Jett. None had been able to clear the final hurdle, until now.
Granite Hills enters Saturday’s championship game on a six-game winning streak and has allowed just one goal in four playoff matches. The Cougars opened with a 3-0 win over Glendale, survived penalty-kick shootouts against Santa Fe and Cypress, and then shut out Indian Springs to punch their ticket.
“What’s special about this team is that we’ve got a lot of youth and speed,” Casarez said. “We’ve got players in the right position when we need height, when we need speed. They are relentless. They buy into our system. We do multiple formations and they believe in it.”
The Cougars have scored 42 goals and allowed 18 in 25 matches this season. Forward Acxel Jimenez leads the attack with 14 goals.
“This means a lot to me because we are at the stage where every game could be your last game,” said Jimenez, a junior. “So, you better make sure you give it your everything in each and every game. It’s a rare achievement. It’s something special and we just gotta keep going.”
His younger brother, freshman Alec Jimenez said the team is motivated by its coach as much as the moment.
“This means a lot. I’m so proud,” he said. “He’s a great coach. He does so much for us. He dedicates so much to the team and getting to the final is our way of giving back to him. We just want to play good for him.”
University will present a formidable challenge.
The Trojans have scored 38 goals and allowed 17 in 20 matches and are also riding a six-game winning streak of their own. They have surrendered just one goal in the playoffs, opening with a 1-0 win over Victor Valley before defeating San Bernardino 3-1, Santa Paula 2-0 and Pacifica 1-0 in the semifinals. University has recorded shutouts in five of its last six matches.
Jake Rabold leads the Trojans with eight goals and nine assists.
Granite Hills and University share one common opponent in Victor Valley. University edged the Jackrabbits 1-0 in the postseason, while Granite Hills split two regular-season meetings, winning 4-2 on Jan. 8 and falling 1-0 on Jan. 27.
Casarez said University’s size stands out on film.
“Their height,” he said. “Their goalkeeper is 6-foot-3. One of their center backs is probably 6-foot-5. They are direct and will be the tallest team we will play this year. They rely on throw-ins and set pieces.”
Still, the Cougars believe their versatility and belief in one another have carried them this far and can carry them one more match.
“It’s huge for me. So much weight has been lingering there,” Casarez said. “If you’re coaching, you’re always aware of that one more thing you haven’t done. It’s the team that made that happen.
“We just made history. As years pass, this will be looked at as the team that made the final. So that’s huge for this team and they will never forget it.”
U.S. women’s national team midfielder Sam Coffey said her team "needs to be better" when it comes to speaking out on issues of social justice, but added that she and her teammates are doing the work as they find their collective voice.
The USWNT has a long history of activism, speaking out for years on topics both soccer-related and outside of sports.
The team famously spent years advocating for equal pay, representing U.S. Soccer on the pitch while battling with the federation off of it. USWNT players have also been vocal about a number of societal issues such as racial justice and LGBTQ+ topics.
But the current iteration of the team has not been as vocal in recent years. Part of that is likely due to a generational shift that has taken place, with outspoken stars like Alex Morgan, Megan Rapinoe and Becky Sauerbrunn, among others, retiring over the past few years.
Coffey has emerged as one of the leaders of the current team, playing a vital role as the team's defensive midfield lynchpin under Emma Hayes.
The Manchester City midfielder is also emerging as one of the more outspoken players on the USWNT roster. Speaking to reporters on Thursday, Feb. 26 as the team prepares for the SheBelieves Cup, Coffey said that the USWNT has to find its own voice with many of its longtime veteran leaders no longer in the picture.
“We no longer have the Beckys (Sauerbrunn), the Klings (Meghan Klingenberg), the Pinoes (Rapinoe), the Alex Morgans," Coffey said.
"I think it was easy as a younger player to just look up to them and know that they always knew what to say or what to do. But now that responsibility is on us and responsibility is the exact word. I think we have a duty to this team and a standard to uphold."
The USWNT played its first game of 2026 on Jan. 24, the same day that federal law enforcement agents killed Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. There was no acknowledgement of the events in Minnesota before or during the game.
The match on Jan. 24 against Paraguay may have been an occasion in which previous iterations of the USWNT made some kind of a statement.
Coffey was blunt in expressing her belief that the team needs to do more, but also said that they are working behind the scenes to decide the best path forward.
“I think we do need to be better in the ways that we’re being vocal and standing up and speaking out about a myriad of topics," the 27-year-old said.
"But I think we can rest assured that we are doing that work, and that we are going to figure it out and figure out what it looks like for us and what feels authentic to this team, because no team is the same.”
The USWNT will face Argentina on March 1 in Nashville, Tennessee, then take on Canada in Columbus, Ohio on March 4. Hayes' side will close the SheBelieves Cup against Colombia on March 7 in Harrison, New Jersey.
T.J. Parker didn’t have the smooth, wire-to-wire season many expected in 2025, but his pre-draft push has changed the narrative.
The Clemson edge rusher entered the year with first-round projections for the 2026 NFL Draft. However, his sack production dipped from 11 in 2024 to five in 2025, and the outside buzz cooled as a result. Instead of fading late, though, Parker responded.
He closed the regular season with a statement performance against South Carolina, posting three sacks and a fumble recovery, then carried that momentum into a strong week at the Senior Bowl. He followed it up with a solid workout at the NFL Scouting Combine, putting himself back on the radar for teams picking late in the first round.
NFL Network analyst Daniel Jeremiah is among those high on Parker. He currently ranks him No. 32 overall and seventh among edge rushers.
“I’m gonna take him at his best, and what we saw was that sandwich, right — ’24, and then the way he finished ’25 and into the Senior Bowl and how we’re seeing him move out here,” Jeremiah said Thursday. “He is a really good player, and I’m going to judge him off of his best. He’s my 32nd player right now, and I think as he’s come through this whole process, he’s really going to solidify himself as a first-round pick.”
Jeremiah praised Parker’s strength, quick hands and ability to slide inside as a rusher. He even compared him to Trey Hendrickson, noting similar get-off and size while pointing out Parker still has room to grow.
Clemson football locks in a visit with Texas's number one WR
Former women’s soccer star Megan Rapinoe argued that the U.S. men’s hockey team ruined its gold medal moment by including the Trump administration.
Following the team’s overtime win over Canada in the gold medal game, FBI Director Kash Patel was invited into the locker room for the post-game celebration. Patel then got President Donald Trump on the phone to congratulate the players.
During that call, Trump invited the men’s team to the State of the Union address. After they enthusiastically accepted, Trump added that he’d “have to” also invite the women’s team, joking that he’d face the threat of impeachment if he didn’t. The remark drew laughter from the players.
The women also won gold days earlier.
When the men returned to their respective NHL teams, they assured the media that they were supportive of the women’s team. Boston Bruins goalie Jeremy Swayman even said the team “should’ve reacted differently” to Trump’s joke.
On Thursday’s episode of A Touch More with Sue Bird & Megan Rapinoe, Rapinoe explained why she believed Trump hijacked the team’s moment, saying:
The United States men’s hockey team, in their utter moment of glory — childhood dreams come true, once-in-a-lifetime accomplishment, sensational — ruined it for themselves because they allowed themselves to be totally co-opted by a clown. And now you’re a clown. You look like a clown.
Kash Patel is in the locker room. He’s partying. He’s chugging beers. I’m not, like, decorum over everything. That’s not what I need out of my FBI director. Like, what are we doing? That’s just whatever, beside the point.
They get on the phone with Trump. I have questions, whether it was even a secure line. That’s beside the point. And Trump makes the comments about the women’s team. We’re not going to play it because it’s all over the internet and we’re not going to platform that trash.
Later on in the conversation, Rapinoe shared her own experience from 2019, when she famously announced that the U.S. women’s soccer team would not be going to the White House after winning the World Cup.
She continued:
We had this opportunity after 2019. Obviously, I said, famously — didn’t know it was on the record, but it was — that we’re not going to the White House and that we’re not even going to be invited. And we were. The president was trying to back-channel and invite us, and we were like, “No,” because we know — we’re not going to be naive in this moment — we know that moment is going to be co-opted because we know this person. Let’s not pretend like we don’t know who this person is.
Make no mistake, the New England Patriots aren't in a rush to push Stefon Diggs out the door. In fact, according to a new report, there's a scenario where the team envisions pairing the former two-time All-Pro wide receiver with another former two-time All-Pro in A.J. Brown.
"According to our sources, there’s a scenario where the Patriots could have both receivers on the roster. In the event Diggs is willing to restructure his contract, the team sees an avenue to pair him with Brown."
A receiving corps featuring both Brown and Diggs on the same team would give the Patriots' offense the elite inside and outside flexibility they lacked last season. It would put opposing defenses in a bind when choosing their method of attack against the Patriots.
They wouldn't be able to simply clamp down on Diggs, like they did throughout the playoffs.
With that said, the possibility of pairing Diggs with Brown would be the dream scenario for New England in the offseason. They still would have to swing a trade with the Philadelphia Eagles to get Brown on their roster, and they'd also have to convince Diggs to agree to a restructured deal, with the 32-year-old wide receiver currently slated to count $26.5 million against the cap in 2026.
In a perfect world, the Patriots' starting receiving corps next season would be Brown, Diggs and Kayshon Boutte. It would give the offense more firepower than it has had in years.
When Arizona took hold of the Big 12's life raft in 2023, jumping from the imploding Pac-12, it faced lesser competition in some nonrevenue sports, more travel, and mostly worse weather.
But there was always this upside, among others: Kansas would be forced to visit McKale Center for men’s basketball games.
Two-and-a-half years after UA accepted the invitation to play in the Big 12, it’s finally happening on Saturday, Feb. 28: The No. 14-ranked Jayhawks will visit McKale, the last of the current Big 12 teams to do so, since they were scheduled only to host Arizona last season.
Once a top rival of Arizona during the Lute Olson era, Kansas has not played at McKale since the 2008-09 season.
“We know everyone's been excited about this game for a long time,” UA coach Tommy Lloyd said.
Lloyd put some caution on it, saying, “It’s one of 18 games in your conference schedule, you're playing at home on a Saturday afternoon, and you want to take advantage of that. I'm not going to make more of a game than that.”
Inside, Lloyd basically said he’s hoping that fans can make more of it. That they can make it the sort of electric environment that Iowa State and Kansas both hosted Arizona in last season, and the sort of crazed environment earlier this month that was the background for another Arizona loss.
Saying last season that he wasn’t indicting UA fans, Lloyd noted that “there’s a gap” between Iowa State and Kansas environments, and the one at McKale. Maybe it gets closed somewhat against the Jayhawks.
“I hope our fans welcome Kansas and coach (Bill) Self like their fans welcomed me,” Lloyd said. “Nothing disrespectful, but they were there for it, and that would be great.
“Our fans need to know that there's a standard that's been set for fandom, and Kansas is pretty high up that list. So let’s compete.”
On the floor, the Wildcats have already been outpacing the Jayhawks despite their 82-78 loss to Kansas on Feb. 9 at Allen Fieldhouse. At 26-2 overall and 13-2 in the Big 12, No. 2 Arizona can clinch a tie for the conference title by avenging that Feb. 9 loss.
That’s not lost on Kansas coach Bill Self. The Jayhawks have won 17 Big 12 championships under Self, but the odds are against them for getting this one.
“It's Arizona's,” Self said, when asked how he saw the conference race “If it doesn’t fall our way on Saturday, I think you're looking at Arizona being the 90, 95% prohibitive favorite to go ahead and close it out.”
“Who knows? But I see everybody obviously needing a lot of help in order for Arizona not to get it done.”
It’s also not lost on Lloyd.
Even being a self-proclaimed day-by-day guy, Lloyd has had no problem speaking to the bigger picture as the title opportunity approaches. He even noted after UA beat Houston last week to take sole possession of first place that the Wildcats had “put ourselves in position to be in position.”
When asked about his change in mentality, Lloyd said, “because it’s closer to reality,” and elaborated further.
“Who cares what anybody says after three, five, seven, eight games,” Lloyd said. “But as you get to the end and you see an opportunity, I think you can acknowledge it's an opportunity.”
It’s also an opportunity to get something particularly meaningful, Lloyd said. While reaching the Final Four takes only four high-level wins, a conference championship is decided over two months of nearly twice-weekly competition, something he said coaches take note of.
“Conference championships mean a lot, I know, to programs and coaches, maybe not the fan bases, because they get fixated on what they consider the final result,” Lloyd said. “But when you do what we do, anytime you're judged over a conference season against your competitors, and if you can come out on top, that says something about your program.
“We want to be a team competing for championships, and a Big 12 championship would be no different. It'd be something we'd be really proud to get done.
“But," he said. "Do it. We‘ve got to go do it now.”
There's a little competition as to who could be the first Michigan football player taken off the board in the April 2026 NFL draft, but the likely candidate is edge rusher Derrick Moore -- though he's getting some competition from fellow edge rusher Jaishawn Barham, who moved over from linebacker this year.
Moore is in Indianapolis for the NFL scouting combine, but with a tweaked hamstring, can't participate in running drills. But he did sit down with an NBC Sports contingent to discuss his preparation for the next level, as well as how he developed in Ann Arbor.
Asked about how Michigan prepared him for this moment, he shares how difficult it was for him to acclimate to Ann Arbor from Baltimore, but how he managed to persevere to be able to achieve 10 sacks in his senior season.
"That program did a lot for me as a ball player and also as a person," Moore said. "I started with a person coming from Baltimore, coming to Michigan. That was a different process for me, a different transition for me. Because I was a quiet kid. But over a course of time, a lot of the vets there, they took me underneath their wings. And I can go on and name a lot of guys, literally a lot of guys, that took me underneath their wing and showed me the right from wrong for what they learned.
"And this told me, eventually, your time is going to come. Because at the time, I was getting frustrated with a lot of things. Your time is going to come. Be patient. And when it's your time, make the best of it. And it also told me, eventually, all of us had to wait our time. And you can see across the board, everybody literally had that time and moment at Michigan.
While Moore acclimated well, having even the key play that sent Alabama packing from the Rose Bowl, he didn't quite feel like he had reached his full potential until this season -- two years later. And for that, he credits a now-departed defensive assistant, who helped him realize what he needed to do in order to become one of the best in college football.
"I want to say, going into my senior year, a guy that really helped me a lot was Pernell McPhee," Moore said. "Played for the Baltimore Ravens and also my defensive ends coach at Michigan my senior year. Him right there, he kind of helped me slow down the game and process it better. Because for me, I was able to watch film. I love to watch film. I was able to watch film, find different keys that I can steal, and different things like that on film. But he also told me how to learn formations. And I feel like a lot of people don't even understand how big that can help you slow down the game.
"And also, being an edge rusher at Michigan, you're pretty much told to play everything. I played from 5-tech, 4-i, 3-tech, dropped into coverage. I had to do everything. So I had to figure out, how can I slow it down? And he told me how to learn formations. So I was able to steal four or five formations each game. And steal a couple sacks on first and second down. And not only -- just had to worry about getting sacks on third down."
Moore is expected to be healthier and ready to go for Michigan's pro day next month with eyes on the NFL draft the following month.
FORT LAUDERDALE — The Panthers have been dogged by injuries all season. Captain Aleksander Barkov has been out for the whole season with a knee injury, and other key players such as Matthew Tkachuk, Dmitry Kulikov and Seth Jones have missed significant amounts of time.
But as the Panthers, who are currently playoff longshots, enter the final month and a half of the season, they should get some reinforcements. Some of those important players are close to returning, and all but Barkov will travel with the team as they embark on a four-game trip that begins after Friday night’s game against Buffalo.
“We’ll bring everybody on our road trip coming up with the exception of Barkov,” Maurice said Thursday morning. “And we’re bringing them because there’s a chance that they may play at some point on that road trip.”
Kulikov, who has played just two games this year, and center Tomas Nosek, who has been out all season, have returned to practice in regular jerseys.
“They’re not far off,” Maurice said Wednesday.
Jones, who has not played since Jan. 2, is practicing in a non-contact jersey.
“He had been off for so long, you almost forget about him and what he can do,” Maurice said Tuesday. “And then he steps back into practice and say, ‘Man, we’ve missed that guy.”
Bobrovsky’s strong night
Panthers goalie Sergei Bobrovsky did not look rusty after weeks off for the Olympics.
The veteran goalie had one of his best games of the season, saving 28 of 29 shots (a .966 save percentage —his highest percentage in a non-shutout) in a 5-1 win over Toronto on Thursday. The sole goal he allowed came when Florida already had a 3-0 lead.
“He certainly had some big saves that he had to make, and he did,” Maurice said.
Bobrovsky said the Olympic break was a good time for him to get in rest while mixing in some training to stay sharp.
“It was a good time for (a) break, just to get rest, and a good time for practicing and for training,” Bobrovsky said. “So that’s also with the heavy schedule, sometimes it’s tough to do.”
Tkachuk’s missing stuffed animal
One of the stars of the Winter Olympics was not an athlete, it was a plush toy version of a cute member of the weasel family. Medal winners at the Milano Cortina games each received a stuffed version of the Olympic mascot, Tina the Stoat.
Tkachuk, an assistant captain for the gold-winning American men’s hockey team, said the team’s stuffed toys were quickly taken away — for the toys’ own protection during the team’s celebration. He said he will have to ask for it back soon.
“They took it away from us immediately, knowing we would probably lose it or trade it in for a beer or like whatever we were going to do with it,” Tkachuk said Thursday. ” … I’ll ask for mine because it’ll be cool for the kids one day.”
ESPN investigative reporter Kayln Kahler published the NFLPA’s report cards. The Browns were among the bottom three teams in the NFL. Thankfully, the team was still better than the Steelers, who ranked dead last. The NFLPA got in hot water over the report cards earlier this year. Owners filed a grievance against the NFLPA, and the arbitrator unsurprisingly ruled in their favor. The arbitrator forbade the NFLPA from publicly publishing their report cards. The NFLPA reaffirmed its commitment to the union and is continuing to run and share the report cards with players.
The Browns continued their descent across the grading rubric. Players seemed fed up with the coaching staff, with one exception: the defensive staff. Jim Schwartz got an A-, while the position coaches, overall, got a B-. Former head coach Kevin Stefanski got the lowest grade among teams, a C-. General manager Andrew Berry tied for the second-worst grade with a C. Finally, Jimmy Haslam was tied for the fifth-worst owner with a C.
Not exactly the data the analytically driven organization wants to see. The players seem pretty sick of the organization. Something painfully obvious to anyone who watched them attempt to play football last season. New head coach Todd Monken received a B- grade from his former team.
Former Notre Dame basketball shooting guard Cormac Ryan, named a team captain before he ever played a game for the Irish, fielded the phone call of phone calls Thursday afternoon. The 6-foot-5, 205-pound Ryan, who has spent the last two seasons in the NBA G League, received word that he would join the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks.
Ryan is on a two-way contract, which allows him to split time between Milwaukee and its G League team for the rest of the regular season. The 27-year-old Ryan was on the Bucks’ roster for Friday’s home game against the New York Knicks. He joins fellow former Irish guards Pat Connaughton (Charlotte) and Blake Wesley (Portland) in the NBA.
“Was only a matter of time,” former Irish coach Mike Brey posted on social media after Ryan’s promotion.
One of only three three-time team captains in Notre Dame program history (Eric Atkins, Rex Pflueger), Ryan was averaging 21.5 points per game and shooting .491 percent from the field, .442 from 3 for Milwaukee’s G League team, the Wisconsin Herd, before being promoted. He spent last season in the G League with the OKC Blue, where he averaged 12.3 points, 3.7 rebounds and 2.0 assists in 37 games. He shot .418 percent from the field, .384 from 3.
Ryan appeared in two preseason games with Milwaukee, averaging 5.0 points, 1.0 rebounds and 1.0 steals in 4.1 minutes.
An undrafted free agent, Ryan played for Stanford, Notre Dame and North Carolina during his six seasons of college basketball. That included one sit-out season (at Notre Dame) under the old NCAA transfer regulations and a bonus year (at North Carolina in 2023-24) because of COVID-19.
Ryan made his name at Notre Dame, where he left with an undergraduate and a master’s degree from the Mendoza College of Business. In 102 games with 70 starts at Notre Dame, Ryan averaged 9.4 points in 28.1 minutes. He made 163 3-pointers and had 207 assists.
He is best known for two specific games.
On Feb. 9, 2021, with no fans in the Cameron Indoor Stadium stands because of the pandemic, Ryan scored 28 points on 10-of-16 from the field and four-of-seven from 3 in 36 minutes of a 93-89 victory at Duke. It was only the second time that Notre Dame beat Duke at Duke.
On March 18, 2022, Ryan erupted for his Irish high of 29 points on seven-of-nine from 3 and six rebounds in a 78-64 victory over Alabama in the first round of the NCAA Tournament in San Diego.
Ryan averaged 12.3 points, 4.0 rebounds and 2.4 assists in 33.8 minutes in 2022-23 at Notre Dame. Connaughton and Ryan both played AAU for coach Michael Crotty with the Middlesex (Massachusetts) Magic.
Connaughton and fellow former Irish Bonzie Colson, playing professionally in Turkey, have also played for Milwaukee during their professional careers. Now 33 years old, Connaughton played for seven seasons with Milwaukee after three with Portland. He was a second-round draft pick by Brooklyn in 2015 after leading Notre Dame to the NCAA Elite Eight.
In his final regular season game with Milwaukee in April 2025, Connaughton scored a career high 43 points with 11 rebounds and five assists. Traded to Charlotte in the offseason, the 6-5, 209-pound Connaughton is averaging 3.1 points, 1.6 rebounds and 0.6 assists in 26 games.
Back from a broken bone in his right foot suffered Halloween night 2025, the 22-year-old Wesley is averaging 5.3 points, 1.7 rebounds and 2.7 assists in 15 games with Portland. On Thursday in Chicago, Wesley scored 10 points with four assists and a steal in 14 minutes of a 121-112 victory by Portland.
Wesley is still the last Irish selected in the NBA draft. He was a first-round pick (25th overall) of the San Antonio Spurs in 2022. Wesley and Connaughton are in the final year of their current contracts.
Follow South Bend Tribune and NDInsider columnist Tom Noie on X (formerly Twitter): @tnoieNDI. Contact Noie at tnoie@sbtinfo.com
Punahele Soriano has won four straight fights since he dropped down to 170 pounds, yet he's been unable to crack the top-15 UFC welterweight rankings.
Soriano (13-4 MMA, 7-4 UFC) extended his welterweight run this past Saturday at UFC Fight Night 267 at Toyota Center in Houston when he defeated the dangerous Ramiz Brahimaj (13-6 MMA, 4-4 UFC) with a unanimous decision. Despite his solid form, Soriano is not bothered that he remains out of the UFC rankings – even though his streak features a win over someone who is ranked: Uros Medic.
"I've got no problem with it at all," Soriano told MMA Junkie. "First of all, I'm very happy for Uros. I think he deserves it. He's put on three spectacular performances, three massive victories. I think he fully deserves all of it. I think he deserves a very big name next. I think it's his choice, too. Whoever he says, he should get.
"I don't think about it too much. For me, in these last four fights, I just notice that if I focus on myself, focus on getting better every day and focus on those two things daily, I'm just going to keep getting better. I think doing that daily, it will come. If it takes a bunch of fights, if it takes a short amount of fights, it's all the same to me. I'm still getting paid and I'm still fighting in the UFC – the greatest organization in the world. It changed my family's life, so I'm grateful for it all."Soriano had a tough time putting wins together at 185 pounds. At one point, prior to making the change to 170 pounds, Soriano was in a 1-4 rut. Since dropping to welterweight in June 2024, Soriano has defeated Miguel Baesa, Medic, Nikolay Veretennikov and now Brahimaj.
The Hawaiian is proud of what he's been able to do in his new weight class and thinks the best is yet to come.
"I felt really good, especially coming in and fighting such a dangerous guy like Ramiz," Soriano said. "I think he's dangerous. I think he's good everywhere, so to be able to pull off a win on a guy like him, it meant the world to me. I think you could see it when they announced the winner. I had no idea if I had gotten it or not, but I was ecstatic. I was very proud of my performance. I fought the whole fight. I didn't quit when it got hard. I pushed through. I looked for hard, violent shots the entire time, and I think it's cool I progressively got better as the fight went on. I know a lot of times people have knocked my cardio, and I think it's cool I went out and showed I'm still getting better."
INDIANAPOLIS - Over the next week and a half, transactions are going to start coming fast and furious as the Buffalo Bills create space under the salary cap in order to sign free agents - some from outside the organization, some from within.
Friday morning, they brought back one of their own as core special teamer Sam Franklin is reportedly locked up on a three-year deal that ESPN pegs at $7.5 million in potential earnings.
Franklin spent the first five years of his career with the Panthers where he established himself as a first-rate core-four special teams player. At one point his coach was Chris Tabor, and when Tabor was hired last season to coach Buffalo’s special teams, he helped convince the Bills to sign Franklin as a free agent.
In his first season with Buffalo, Franklin played 329 snaps which trailed only Joe Andreessen and Reggie Gilliam, and he was in on 12 tackles, though there weren’t any splash plays such as forced fumble or recoveries.
Franklin is not an option on defense - he played only six snaps last year - so this is strictly a move to maintain some continuity on special teams. A move the Bills should certainly make is to re-sign Gilliam who has become not only one of the team’s best special teams players, but also has been an excellent blocking fullback who saw increased playing time in 2025 in that role.
The Bills late last week re-signed restricted free agent offensive lineman Alec Anderson, but they still have 20 players due to hit the open market on March 11.
Sal Maiorana has covered the Buffalo Bills for more than four decades including 36 years as the full-time beat writer/columnist for the D&C. He has written numerous books about the history of the team, and he is also co-host of the BLEAV in Bills podcast/YouTube show. He can be reached at maiorana@gannett.com, and you can follow him on X @salmaiorana and on Bluesky @salmaiorana.bsky.social.
Partick Thistle's Wyre Stadium at Firhill has been chosen to host the KDM Evolution Trophy final between Inverness Caledonian Thistle and Raith Rovers.
The match will be broadcast live on BBC Alba on Sunday, 5 April, with a 16:10 BST kick-off.
Both finalists are looking to lift the Challenge Cup, for Scottish Professional Football League clubs below the Premiership, for a fourth time.
But it is the inaugural final under the current format, which started with a Champions League-style league phase, and the new sponsor.
SPFL chief executive Neil Doncaster said: "It promises to be a closely-contested game as both teams compete to be the first winners of our impressive new trophy."
Caley Thistle, who are looking to lift the trophy for the first time since they shared it with Rovers when the season was cut short by the Covid pandemic in 2020, topped the league phase with a 100% record.
Scott Kellacher's current League 1 leaders then defeated Dumbarton 9-0, League 1 promotion rivals Stenhousemuir and two Championship sides - Thistle and Ayr United - away from home.
Championship side Rovers are in their third final in five seasons, last winning the trophy in 2022.
With second-tier clubs having byes from the league phase, the Kirkcaldy side, now with Dougie Imrie in charge, defeated League 1 duo Hamilton Academical and Queen of the South before knocking out Championship rivals Queen's Park and Airdrieonians.
An estimated £1.25m in prize money will have been shared with clubs competing in the competition this season – an increase of more than 50% on last season - with the 2025/26 winners receiving £150,000 and the runners-up £100,000.
You've probably already learned this, but the temperature around the Philadelphia Eagles has felt inconsistent lately. One week, the conversation centers on culture and accountability. The next week, discussions shift to leadership, communication, and whether everyone inside the building is truly aligned.
Winning cures most things in the NFL, and it typically does for the Birds, too, for a while. Then, perceptions return and linger, especially when expectations are as high as they are in Philadelphia.
That's why communication matters. Not press conferences. Not anonymous sourcing. Not talk radio. Actual feedback from the players who live the grind every day.
If you're interested in how a team truly feels about its environment and leadership, a trip to the locker room is important. When ESPN senior writer Kalyn Kahler released the NFLPA's 2026 team report cards, the results offered a rare, unfiltered look inside all 32 franchises.
Nick Sirianni receives an A grade from his players.
The survey, one conducted by the NFLPA from November 2 to December 11, included 1,759 player responses. Every player who was a member of a 2025 NFL roster was eligible to participate. Teams were graded from A-plus to F-minus on everything from ownership and coaching to treatment of families and travel conditions.
Some of the Eagles' marks raised eyebrows. Here's one that carries a lot of weight. Nick Sirianni received an A.
Sure, you can debate his in-game decision-making. We can question his temperament. We can argue about the direction of the offense. Fans and media will always have opinions.
It also, however, matters what the players think, and based on the results, they have made that clear. For all the noise surrounding the Eagles, and for all the speculation about tension (or favoritism or cracks in the foundation), the locker room gave its head coach a resounding vote of confidence.
Eagles layers handed out a C+ for treatment of families and a D for the team locker room. The offensive coordinator position received a C+, which won't stun anyone who followed the season's ups and downs.
Team travel earned an F, and frankly, that feels predictable. Most of us are uncomfortable crammed into buses, trains, and flights. Now imagine doing it at 6-foot-8 and 365 pounds like Jordan Mailata. Perspective matters.
Kon Knueppel set the NBA record for the most 3-pointers in a season by a rookie on Thursday, helping the Charlotte Hornets to their ninth straight win on the road.
Knueppel produced 28 points, four rebounds, two assists, one steal and one blocked shot in a 133-109 victory over the Indiana Pacers at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. He knocked down eight 3s and was a team-best plus-26 in 31 minutes, 12 seconds of action.
The fourth overall pick clinched the record in the third quarter with his sixth triple, surpassing Keegan Murray for the most in history. Murray sealed it in 80 games with the Sacramento Kings during the 2022-23 season, while Knueppel did so in his 59th game.
"Just my teammates for embracing me and really helping me out," Knueppel said of what means most about the record. "That is a lot of 3s, and it is a lot of looks off other teammates. So them letting me come on the team and letting me play my game, I think, is cool."
KON MAKES HISTORY ‼️
With this three, Kon Knueppel has set the new NBA rookie record for 3-pointers made in a season! pic.twitter.com/CoaK09QIQY
Averaging 3.5 3s per game this season, Knueppel on Tuesday became the fastest player in history to reach 200 career 3-pointers (58 games). He is currently the only player in the league this season with at least 200 3-pointers (209).
Knueppel tied his own franchise record for 3s made in a single game with the performance, which was originally set on Jan. 29 in a win over the Dallas Mavericks. He is also the third rookie in history with multiple games of at least 30 points and seven 3s.
"It is very special to be a part of," Hornets coach Charles Lee said. "Any time you can be around moments like that, that are historic, it is pretty special. To see where his story started and where he continues to ascend to is really cool. I think that not only has Kon done a phenomenal job to accomplish what he just accomplished, but it is also the players around him have put him in great positions. They've helped him along the way."
Knueppel is averaging 19.4 points, 5.4 rebounds and 3.5 assists while shooting 44.2% from 3-point range this season with the Hornets. He leads the rookie class in total scoring (1,146) and is one of two first-year players with at least five 30-point games.
The former Duke guard has emerged as a significant contributor for the Hornets (29-31) and is a key reason the team is in contention for the play-in race. He wants to continue to build toward reaching the playoffs for the first time in 10 years.
"We got to take care of the games that we believe we should win," Knueppel said. "So going forward, just playing together defensively and offensively will be the best strategy."
The NFL draft is fast approaching, and all eyes were on the first day of workouts at the NFL combine in Indianapolis. Baltimore has a certain player prototype, preferring athletic prospects with big-game experience and leadership. Every player drafted in 2025 embodied those traits.
In 2026, the Ravens will again work to have one of the most explosive classes in the draft. The one metric that all 32 teams around the league utilize is the RAS (Relative Athletic Score), which measures a player's athletic testing in relation to size and historical results.
It's graded on a scale of 1-10, with 10 being the highest.
The first group to work out was the defensive interior and defensive line, and we're examining the Relative Athletic Scores of five defensive tackles Baltimore could target in next month's draft.
Lee Hunter, DT, Texas Tech
A huge interior defender and run game destroyer at Texas Tech, Hunter earned first-team All-American and first-team All-Big 12 in his redshirt senior season. The 6-4, 330-pound defensive tackle posted 8.5 tackles for loss in addition to 2.5 sacks and a forced fumble. He finished his career with 168 total tackles and 7.5 sacks.
Lee Hunter is a DT prospect in the 2026 draft class. He scored an unofficial 3.72 RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 1285 out of 2046 DT from 1987 to 2026.
According to Adam Schefter, Halton's 36.5” vertical jump is the third highest of any DT at the combine in at least the last 20 years.
Gracen Halton is a DT prospect in the 2026 draft class. He scored an unofficial 9.70 RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 63 out of 2046 DT from 1987 to 2026.
At 6-foot-5, 313 pounds with 10 1/4-inch hands and 33 7/8-inch arms, Capehart is more blue-collar than wow factor, but there's no debating his athleticism.
DeMonte Capehart is a DT prospect in the 2026 draft class. He scored an unofficial 9.97 RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 8 out of 2046 DT from 1987 to 2026.
Eason is a former linebacker who bulked up and moved inside to defensive tackle.
Bryson Eason is a DT prospect in the 2026 draft class. He scored an unofficial 8.26 RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 356 out of 2046 DT from 1987 to 2026.
Ball started in all 11 games, recording 27 total tackles, including four and a half tackles for loss and six quarterback hurries.
Cameron Ball is a DT prospect in the 2026 draft class. He scored an unofficial 8.26 RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 357 out of 2046 DT from 1987 to 2026.
An athletic marvel, Durant is a 6'1", 287-pound defensive tackle who is undersized and struggles to win as a pass-rusher, but is stout against the run.
Zane Durant is a DT prospect in the 2026 draft class. He scored an unofficial 9.22 RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 161 out of 2046 DT from 1987 to 2026.
Banks struggled with a foot injury in 2025, but in 2024, the athletic Banks recorded three sacks, 17 total pressures, and a 16.7% pass-rush win rate over his final three games against LSU, Ole Miss, and Florida State.
Caleb Banks is a DT prospect in the 2026 draft class. He scored an unofficial 9.84 RAS out of a possible 10.00. This ranked 34 out of 2046 DT from 1987 to 2026.
Sweat is an ascending player who just completed his second season. By acquiring him, the Jets continue to indicate they don't worry much about football character.
Sweat had supposed character concerns coming out of Texas following an alleged DWI arrest just weeks before the draft. Then-Titans GM Ran Carthon drafted him at No. 38 overall anyway. Sweat's sophomore season in Tennessee was littered with red flags.
Sweat missed the majority of Titans training camp with tonsillitis. Unsurprisingly, the big-bodied nose tackle was poorly conditioned once the season began. Sweat injured his ankle in Week 1, sidelining him for Week 2. Peculiarly, he then declared himself healthy for Week 3. The Titans placed him on four-game IR less than 48 hours later.
"Sweat has two years left on his rookie deal, is enormously talented and had a pretty rough reputation in the Titans organization," Sports Illustrated's Albert Breer wrote about the trade. "We’ll see if being traded lights a fire underneath him that Tennessee couldn’t ignite the last two years."
New Titans GM Mike Borgonzi is attempting to build a locker room culture. That's precisely why he traded Jarvis Brownlee Jr. to the Jets during the season.
Now, Borgonzi found the Jets willing to acquire another player whose personality he did not care for in Sweat. Darren Mougey obviously didn't share the same concerns on Sweat and Brownlee.
Aidan Hubbard ended his college career in fifth place on Northwestern's all-time sack leaders list. In amassing 20.5 career sacks, he flashed the pass rushing potential that helped him score an invite to the NFL Scouting Combine. This past season Hubbard racked up 28 total tackles, 10 tackles for loss and a career-high 7.5 sacks despite missing two games, due to injury.
Hubbard put on quite a show in the win over Central Michigan in the GameAbove Sports Bowl. This dominant performance complemented the absolute monster showing he had in the 2023 win over Maryland. Unfortunately, there weren't more extraordinary individual outings like this. Entering the bow game, Hubbard had even dropped off the NFL Draft potential radar a little bit.
While he was a two-time All-Big Ten Honorable Mention honoree, over the course of his Wildcats career, one has to wonder just what might have been with this guy. On the big board of overall prospects, he typically ranks somewhere in the 300s.
His current draft grade is thought to be UDFA, so there is obviously a lot of work to do this week in Indianapolis. However, this is what makes the combine great, as it provides tremendous opportunities for guys like Hubbard.
In an exclusive with The Sports Bank, Hubbard discussed what he feels he must improve, in order to carve out a good professional career.
"It comes down to your get-off, if you can get off the block and have that dominant first step, you have a good chance to win the matchup," he said.
"It comes down to speed really- the get-off is the most important part of the your rush."
Hubbard really truly gets it, and in this pass-first league, there will always be a pass rush specializing niche to be carved out. He also perfectly understands the rebranding of the DE position from "Defensive End" to "Edge Rusher" or "EDGE" in recent years.
"I feel like it's kind of vague," Hubbard said in the same interview.
"I feel it's D end, that's what I say when people ask me what position I play. And then it just comes down to setting the edge in run downs and rushing the edge in pass downs."
On the NFL.com draft prospects page, Hubbard projects into the "Average backup or special-teamer" category, with a score of 5.9 on the scale of 5.5-8.0, so he has potential to make it in the league, and stick.
The Buffalo Bills and rest of the NFL are in business mode at the 2026 NFL combine in Indianapolis throughout this week.
Along with nitpicking and chatting to prospects entering the upcoming draft, Buffalo's front office spoke at interviews of their own... namely general manager Brandon Beane and head coach Joe Brady.
With that, here are five takeaways from Brady's combine press conference:
Latest on Keon
After the madness relating to what team owner Terry Pegula said at the Bills' end-of-season press conference about wide receiver Keon Coleman, Beane made a strong point at the combine.
The Bills GM mentioned Coleman can't "let some of the maturity issues off the field effect the product on the field."
Beane's full remarks can be found here:
"It's the maturity. It's the off the field... I've seen that many times get in the way of people's opportunities to grow."
That has not yet happened with Knox, but the desire is not surprising from Beane. Knox's $17 million salary cap hit is a big number.
Kincaid's option
Beane said the Bills will exercise the fifth-year option on tight end Dalton Kincaid's rookie contract... at the right time. That was essentially referencing once there is salary cap space cleared.
More from Beane:
Brandon Beane provided further clarity regarding Dalton Kincaid’s fifth-year option while appearing on @OneBillsLive on Tuesday
Beane confirmed the Bills will pick up Kincaid’s option, which is worth $8.75 million pic.twitter.com/OIHNrz1Ynp
Buffalo's longtime nickel defender Taron Johnson could potentially be moved to safety. Nothing is set in stone just yet, but as Beane and the Bills look to add and adjust the secondary this offseason... that change was not ruled out.
"Nothing's off the table," Beane said. "We’ll look at anything and everything as we make these decisions. He's a good football player, and so you never want to rule anything out if you think that's the best position for him after a couple weeks with [defensive coordinator] Jim (Leonhard)."
No hard feelings
Beane and the Bills certainly heard critics of decisions already made this offseason, namely firing former head coach Sean McDermott and promoting Beane to President of Football Operations.
While the Bills GM knows some of those came from Bills Mafia, there are no hard feelings.
“You want fans that are passionate. Fans that aren’t that means they don’t care.“ - Brandon Beane on any Bills fan discontent this offseason.
NFL Combine week isn’t even over and many Dallas Cowboys fans already have their favorite prospects identified. From Caleb Downs at safety to Sonny Styles at linebacker, playmakers are aplenty in this year’s annual draft. But which prospects are going to be there at No. 12 and which ones will be long gone? It’s an age-old question that has no definitive answer. Sure, CeeDee Lamb falling to 17 taught Cowboys fans anything is possible, but what is actually likely?
Twitter personality Eagles Eric ran a Monte Carlo simulation of mock drafts in an attempt to gauge the probability how far each prospect falls and which ones are most likely to be there when their respective team goes on the clock. The good news for Cowboys fans is the top three individual likely outcomes for Dallas are Ohio State linebackers Sonny Styles (13.0%) and Arvell Reese (10.6%) and Tennessee cornerback Jermond McCoy (7.1%). The bad news is, at a probability of 69.3%, the most likely outcome will be someone else.
I built a Round 1 NFL Draft predictor using a Monte Carlo simulation
It uses the consensus big board and team positional pick probabilities from mock drafts to simulate a distribution of outcomes
The team positional probabilities have been suprisingly accurate over the past few… pic.twitter.com/JBTQ7czWGt
It’s safe to say most Cowboys fans would be elated with either Styles or Reese at Pick 12. Feelings towards McCoy are more complicated given his questionable medicals. McCoy has yet to play, or even publicly work out, since tearing his knee in January of 2025. With more than a year of recovery time the hope is he’s fully cleared by now, but until he proves it, his value is in jeopardy.
Since the “other” category is winning the probability battle right now, it’s worth looking into which one of those “others” might be on the board at 12.
Safety Caleb Downs, the dream scenario for most Cowboys fans, has a 44% chance based on these simulations. The value of the safety position combined with team needs makes him a possibility if he can escape the evil clutches of the New York Giants.
Rueben Bain and his shorter-than-ideal-arm-length has a 22% chance of making it to Dallas. It’s unlikely, but perfectly possible. Mansoor Delane, regarded by most as the top CB in the class, has a 49% chance of making it to the Cowboys. He’s essentially a flip of the coin. While offensive tackle Francis Mauigoa has a 37% chance of getting to 12.
For many of these prospects, the odds look better than many people probably imagined. Yet it’s important to keep in mind the probabilities still say none of them are going to make it and Dallas will have to pick outside that pool of players.
Not until Spencer Fano, standout OT from Utah, do the odds start to fall into Dallas’ favor (51%). McCoy with a 58% chance of being available is the best blend of need and availability, but he has all of those aforementioned issues to consider.
Once the NFL Combine concludes, the big boards get updated and new simulations can run, will we know what the effects of this week have had on the probabilities. But for now, it’s worth knowing most of everyone’s top targets are technically possible even if they're all unlikely.
The Trojans will have representation in the first round of the NFL draft with Makai Lemon, as he is becoming more and more a draft crush. The Trojans still have a couple of potential draft sleepers that could end up as steals when it is all said and done.
In a recent tweet by @SleeperNFL, there is some reported interest in some former Trojan safeties from the Denver Broncos organization. Here is what @SleeperNFL had to say on the matter:
"The Broncos have interest in both USC safeties, Kamari Ramsey and Bishop Fitzgerald, per
@TonyPauline Denver recently hired Doug Belk away from USC to be its new defensive backs coach."
Doug Belk was the Trojans' defensive backs coach from 2024-25. He knows better than anyone what Kamari Ramsey and Bishop Fitzgerald are both capable of. There is a need for the Denver Broncos at the safety position, as Brandon Jones is recovering from a pec injury, and there is still depth needed in that position.
Kamari Ramsey had a down year last season, mostly because of injuries, but in 2024 he was as good as any safety in the country. He is a good coverage safety, he has a great amount of athleticism, and he is a willing tackler.
Bishop Fitzgerald is a ball-hawking safety. He has had no issues with interception production at every stop he has been at, and he is also a very willing run stopper. Both safeties have traits that, if developed properly, can take them to becoming star safeties in the NFL.
In the NFL, one of the best things is continuity and familiarity. For the Broncos, it would be very wise to ensure your staff has players they have familiarity with or guys they know they can get the most out of. Kamari Ramsey and Bishop Fitzgerald ended up with their former coach would be a best case scenario for both of them.
Chelsea boss Liam Rosenior has been speaking to the media before Sunday's Premier League game against Arsenal at Emirates Stadium (16:30 GMT).
Here are the key lines from his news conference:
Rosenior confirmed Marc Cucurella is not available for Sunday but "hopefully we can get him back quickly as soon as possible", while Estevao Willian will be "out for a little bit longer", Jamie Gittens is "progressing in his rehab" and Dario Essugo is "back on the training pitch".
Captain Reece James is "absolutely fine" while Romeo Lavia is "getting stronger and stronger" and "we had a mini-practice match in the week where he looked really good".
On facing holders Paris St-Germain in the Champions League last 16: "So excited. PSG are a fantastic team. I have experience of playing against them in France. I have always admired them. Luis Enrique has done an incredible job. These are the games you live for, games that you come into football for. It's going to be a great tie. But we've got another three games before that, that I need to focus on."
On the race to qualify for next season's Champions League: "I want the players to be as physically and mentally fresh as possible. They've looked really good in training this week. We need to stay calm and consistent in our process. This club should be in the Champions League, this club is a Champions League club. When I took over, we were eighth. We're now in the race."
Rosenior was asked about the club's finances after they posted the highest annual loss ever by an English football club: "My job is to focus on the team, trying to make the team and the squad as strong as possible to win things. I will have those conversations with the ownership and those above me. But [finances] are not something that is at the forefront of my mind. I just want to make sure we are successful on the pitch."
On racist abuse suffered by Wesley Fofana after getting sent off in last weekend's draw against Burnley: "It was a tough day for Wes. First for what happened in the game and the racist abuse he got online. It affects you in ways that shouldn't exist. It's something we have to try and eradicate from life and football. He is strong and has trained this week."
Anticipating the challenge posed by the league leaders, Rosenior said: "They are an incredibly well-coached team in every aspect of the game. Whether they compress really high, they have compact shape in the low blocks, they are fantastic defensively, obviously set-plays, they are well-coached and they play very good football as well. They are a very good team and that is why they are in the situation they are in at the moment. It is my job and the players' job to try to find that weakness and try to enjoy what is going to be a really, really big game on Sunday."
Championship leaders Coventry City look well set to return to the Premier League for the first time since the 2000-01 season [Getty Images]
Championship leaders Coventry City have posted a pre-tax loss of £21.6m for the 2024-25 financial year.
Turnover increased by nearly £5m to just over £34m, boosted by increases in match receipts, broadcast revenue and commercial income as the club reached the semi-finals of the play-offs.
However, operating expenses grew by £5.6m to about £32m because of "continued investment in the playing squad", and the compensation costs of sacking Mark Robins in November 2024 and the hiring of Frank Lampard, which the club described as "exceptional".
Profit from player sales decreased by £20m to just over £3m on the previous financial year, in which Viktor Gyokeres and Gustavo Hamer joined Sporting Lisbon and Sheffield United respectively.
The club said "significant external investment" along with reinvesting the Gyokeres and Hamer fees have enabled them to build a "meaningful squad value" whose estimated current market transfer value "vastly exceeds that which is held on the club's balance sheet".
The figures are in contrast to the club's £8.7m profit from 2023-24, the first full campaign following Doug King's takeover.
This set of accounts does not include the purchase of the club's stadium - the Coventry Building Society Arena - in August last year, which the club said at the time was a "pivotal moment" in their history.
Owner and executive chairman King said the goal was to "significantly reduce" the club's annual operating loss from 2026-27 onwards.
He added that would be done while "remaining competitive at the top end of the Championship" and "reaching our goal of a play-off berth three times in every five years".
"Whilst the Championship remains grossly distorted by the Premier League parachute payment scheme, this is the only realistic target," King said.
Under Lampard, Coventry look well set to go one better than last season's play-off heartbreak and seal a return to the Premier League after a 25-year absence.
With 12 games to go, the Championship leaders are five points clear of Middlesbrough in second and nine ahead of third-placed Millwall.
The Brooklyn Nets (15-43) have not won a game since coming back from the All-Star break and part of the reason for that is the team being unable to play well for all four quarters. Brooklyn had another chance of ending their losing streak with the San Antonio Spurs (43-16) coming to Barclays Center, but they failed in being able to win a game against one of the best teams in the NBA.
The Netslost to the Spurs on Thursday 126-110 in a game where Brooklyn didn't earn the lead once while also falling behind by as many as 26 points in a lopsided game. Forward Michael Porter Jr. had 25 points and 14 rebounds for one of his better games in recent memory while backup center Day'Ron Sharpe had 14 points and 11 rebounds coming off the bench.
The Nets did a great job of limiting center Victor Wembanyama's impact as he scored just 12 points on 3-of-9 shooting from the field, but Julian Champagnie scored 26 points by taking advantage of the gravity that Wembanyama has. Brooklyn will be facing the Boston Celtics on Friday, but for now, here are three Nets takeaways from Thursday's loss to the Spurs:
Michael Porter Jr. Has Uneven Performance
Porter finished this game with a great stat line of 25 points and 14 rebounds, but he also had a whopping six turnovers while notching most of his production in an dominant third quarter. In the first, second, and fourth quarters, Porter notched eight points on 3-of-14 shooting from the field, but in the third period, he had 17 points and 6-of-8 shooting. This has been an interesting trend for Porter as he doesn't seem to be able to sustain his efficient scoring for an entire game, but he certainly has some impressive stretches.
Day'Ron Sharpe Notches Another Double-Double
Sharpe came off the bench in this game, but he finished with 14 points, 11 rebounds, and four assists in just 19 minutes while also going against Wembanyama and Luke Kornet during his time on the floor. In a game that turned into another blowout, Sharpe is having arguably the best season of his career as he heads into an offseason where the Nets have a team option on his contract for next season.
Egor Demin Passes Well, But Wasn't Aggressive Scoring
This was arguably Demin's best passing game of his rookie season as he finished with nine assists to just one turnover against one of the best defenses in the league. With that being said, Demin also had six points on just three shots, showing that he wasn't particularly aggressive looking for his own offense. At some point, Demin should be able to combine the scoring/shooting and playmaking at the same time.
Wrestlers from Section V and the rest of the state need to be ready to go, when the first matches of the high school state championships begin today in Albany.
There are 56 wrestlers from schools in Section V who advanced to states, 28 in Division I or large schools and 28 in Division II. Like most of the other New York State Public High School Athletic Association sections, Section V has two qualifiers in each weight class.
A few wrestlers, their fans, coaches and media members, if they can, will stop what they are doing to watch Pittsford's Samson McKissic Staley and Honeoye Falls-Lima's Chris Noto wrestle.
Noto is on a march toward a second state championship in Division II, after winning the 131-pound small schools title last year.
McKissick Staley, most of the time, also makes defeating above-average high school wrestlers look easy. Sports Illustrated had McKissick Staley at No. 13 in its national rankings of 150-pound high school wrestlers. He has been a state runner-up the last two years.
Both seniors received the John Ordiway Outstanding Wrestler Award from the Section V Wrestling Officials group at the Section V Division I and Division II State Qualifiers on Valentine's Day at Bath Haverling and Rush-Henrietta.
The action today in downtown Albany is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. and continue until the semifinal and consolation matchups are set.
Top-flight German football is being shown live on the BBC this season after rights were secured to broadcast Friday night Bundesliga matches through to 2027.
The coverage will continue on Friday, 27 February when Köln look to distance themselves from the Bundesliga relegation play-off position as they travel to inform Augsburg.
Matches will be available to watch live on the BBC Sport website, app and on BBC iPlayer every Friday, with clips of the biggest in-game moments across BBC Sport's social media channels.
Who plays next?
Augsburg have won four of their last five Bundesliga matches [Getty Images]
Augsburg have found some form in recent weeks, winning four of their last five Bundesliga matches, a run that started with a 2-1 away win over league leaders Bayern Munich to serve them their first and only Bundesliga defeat of the season.
This turn of form has seen them jump from 15th in the league table to 10th and put some distance between them and the relegation play-off position. A win on Friday night would see them closer to a Europa Conference League place than the relegation play-off.
Köln have struggled in recent weeks, picking up just one point in their last three matches. The point came against highfliers Hoffenheim last time out, and their two losses were to Stuttgart and RB Leipzig who are fighting for Champions League positions at the top of the table.
Despite this, the Billy Goats will still be hopeful of avoiding the drop this season as they have been able to find wins against other relegation contenders Wolfsburg and Mainz since the turn of the year. A win against Augsburg would see them seven points from the relegation play-off position.
This fixture has been played out 26 times across all competitions, with nothing splitting the two sides. Both Augsburg and Köln have won this fixture eight times and the match has ended in a draw on 10 occasions. In fact, the last three encounters between these two sides have finished in a 1-1 draw. Augsburg will be looking to come away with all three points against Köln for the first time since December 2021.
Upcoming fixtures on BBC
List of confirmed fixtures and dates with more to be announced in due course:
(Kick-off times 19:30 GMT)
Augsburg v Cologne - 27 February
Hamburg v Bayer Leverkusen - (Wednesday) 4 March
Bayern Munich v Borussia Monchengladbach - 6 March
The Unpacking Future Packers Countdown is a countdown of 100 prospects who the Green Bay Packers could select in the 2026 NFL draft.
Since taking over as general manager of the Green Bay Packers in 2018, Brian Gutekunst has drafted 17 offensive linemen, and he's drafted at least one offensive lineman in every draft, except for the 2023 NFL Draft. That number figures to climb and could even reach 20 by the end of the 2026 NFL Draft.
A potential target on Day 3 of the draft is Carver Willis. The Washington offensive lineman checks in at No. 60 in the Unpacking Future Packers Countdown.
A native of Colorado, Willis started his college career at Kansas State, where he started 18 games at right tackle. Willis transferred to Washington for the 2025 season and started 10 games at left tackle.
Washington offensive tackle Carver Willis has had an underrated week at the @seniorbowl. was @BrandonThornNFL's #2 OL on the National team yesterday and threw Clemson EDGE TJ Parker - a projected top-50 pick - to the ground today: pic.twitter.com/qLjk6JpKB4
"Carver’s greatest strength is his intelligence and attention to detail," Roman Tomashoff, the editor for UWHuskiesWire, said. "He spends a lot of time and energy working on not just his technique, but helping his teammates with theirs. He has a great understanding of his body and strengths as a pass protector and run blocker, and combined with his technique, he’d be a great fit for an NFL team anywhere along the offensive line."
Willis finished his collegiate career with over 1,200 snaps at right tackle and 600-plus snaps at left tackle. He took two snaps at left guard, which he's a candidate to kick inside at the next level, and he could be the next college offensive tackle the Packers take with an eye on kicking him inside to guard.
Willis shows good initial quickness to fly out of his stance. He's comfortable on the move and shows good range as a run blocker. He's a player who will likely be one of the top testing offensive lineman at the NFL Scouting Combine. The Kansas State transfer has strong hands and works hard to sustain, consistently creating movement in the ground game to open up running lanes.
"He worked really hard to gain weight and add strength to his frame once he got to UW," Tomashoff said. "I think we really saw it show up in his upper body, especially as Big Ten play wore on. He played with great physicality when run blocking."
Willis is assignment-sound and has active eyes. He’s efficient in his pass sets and coordinated in his shuffle to cut off rush angles. He uses efficient hand strikes. This past season he gave up two sacks and 22 pressures in his first season starting at left tackle.
"Carver is very trustworthy in pass protection," Tomashoff said. "His understanding of technique, plus his improved strength, showed up no matter who was across from him all season long."
Fit with the Packers
The Packers are set to have Rasheed Walker and Sean Rhyan hit free agency, while Elgton Jenkins is expected to be a cap casualty.
With those potential departures, the Packers will need to invest heavily in the offensive line as they look for a new starting center, a swing tackle and interior depth.
Targeting a player like Willis on Day 3 of the draft would make sense for the Packers. He's a player who has experience playing both tackle spots and he may be best suited to kick inside to guard. He could serve as a backup guard, while moving out to tackle if the Packers get in a bind.
"I’d draft Carver because he’s the kind of player who can elevate an offensive line both on and off the field," Tomashoff said. "He’s a lot of fun to talk to and be around, and combined with his willingness and ability to adapt to whatever his coaches are asking him to do, should make him a great fit no matter where he winds up at the next level."
Willis checks the boxes. He's 6-4, 305 pounds, and nearly 34-inch arms. He's got the athleticism and movement skills that the Packers look for, and he has the versatility to play four positions. A likely fourth- or fifth-round pick, Willis could provide much-needed quality depth for Green Bay's offensive line.
Usman was hoping the UFC would be on board with his pitch to challenge welterweight champion Islam Makhachev, but it appears the promotion could be going another direction. The former five-time defending 170-pound champ returned to the win column by snapping Joaquin Buckley's winning streak in June.
"The Islam fight was obviously what I wanted and what I felt would have been great," Usman said on his "Pound 4 Pound" podcast with Henry Cejudo. "Not just for me, not just for Islam, but would have been great for the company, would have been great for the world to see that. Listen, people count me out day in and day out. The one thing that I do or I know for a fact I am, I'm honest with my abilities. ... When I say I can still do this at that high level, I mean that.
"And for some reason, we've had conversations, but Hunter Campbell feels differently, and Hunter Campbell's like, maybe not. We don't know yet, but it's been a tumultuous back-and-forth with getting that done. Then other things were presented to me, like potentially DDP was presented to me or other guys. One thing about me, when they call and they say this guy or that guy, I say yes. At this point, it has to be meaningful. I'm not here just to fight the fight. If he gets me to the title that I want, that's what I want."
Makhachev himself expressed interest in adding Usman's name to his legacy, but welterweight currently has a plethora of top contenders from Ian Machado Garry, to Michael Morales, and Carlos Prates.
It's F1 season, folks, and the 2026 season is going to be a wild one. With the new regulations, the teams and drivers who you think could be contenders may not be. But we'll see once the red lights go out in Melbourne.
Meanwhile, if you're playing fantasy F1, you have important work: You need a team name for your squad that will make your league mates laugh or be impressed, and that's what we're here to help with.
Here are a bunch of fantasy team names that we could print, with links to credit the sites we got them from:
Aston Villa renew hostilities with Lille as they look to end their 30-year trophy drought.
The clubs will meet in the last 16 of the Europa League next month - a repeat of their Europa Conference League quarter-final tie two years ago, which Villa won on penalties.
It is perhaps most remembered for Emi Martinez being shown two yellow cards and remaining on the pitch.
The second came during the shoot out, after he gestured to the home fans, but he stayed on given yellow cards do not carry over from the game after the end of extra-time.
The goalkeeper will look to be the hero again when Villa travel to France on 12 March, before the return leg at Villa Park a week later.
Former Arsenal striker Olivier Giroud, Ethan Mbappe - brother of Real Madrid striker Kylian - will be looking to end Villa's European dreams.
Lille, who last won the title in 2020–21, are fifth in Ligue 1 - 17 points behind leaders Paris St Germain.
Villa remain favourites for the Europa League, finishing second in the league phase behind Lyon, and their path to the final is now laid out.
Bologna or Roma wait in the quarter finals while Stuttgart, Porto, Nottingham Forest or Midtjylland are potential opponents in the last four.
Premier League managers speaking on Friday: Pep Guardiola news conference after Man City drawn against Real Madrid in Champions League
Champions League last-16 ties: Arsenal v Leverkusen | Chelsea v PSG | ManCity v Real Madrid | Newcastle v Barcelona | Liverpool v Galatasaray | Tottenham v Atletico Madrid
Gareth Thomas has cousin Steffan Thomas as his back-up on the Ospreys bench against Ulster [Huw Evans Agency]
Wales prop Gareth Thomas' reward for "begging" to be released from Steve Tandy's Six Nations squad will be a 150th Ospreys appearance when they host Ulster in the United Rugby Championship (URC) on Saturday.
Thomas will run out in Bridgend aiming to prove a point after dropping down the Wales pecking order, with Rhys Carre of Saracens the current first-choice Wales loose-head and Leicester's Nicky Smith as back-up.
"I was pretty much begging Steve [Tandy] last week if I can come back to play my 150th game at home in front of my family so I'm really excited for it," said Thomas.
"It (his time with Ospreys) has flown, but I'm quite proud to achieve that. If you look at my position, who has achieved that?
"There are only three or four top-end loose-heads who have done it so to be in that group is class in a club that I love as well. It's a proud moment for me."
Centre Owen Watkin, flanker Harri Deaves and scrum-half Reuben Morgan-Williams also return to Ospreys having been released by Wales for URC duties this weekend.
Watkin joins Thomas in the starting XV with Deaves and Morgan-Williams on the bench.
Thomas fears for Ospreys future
As Thomas reflected on his time with Ospreys, he also expressed fears within the organisation over the continued uncertainty over whether they have a long-term future.
"I love the club and what it represents, what it's about and who's worn the jersey before me. I supported the Ospreys when I was younger and it kills me a little bit when you think of the history just stopping at a point. It doesn't sit well with me," said Thomas.
"Having 150 jerseys means so much to me and I don't want to look back and think I've had 150 caps for a club that doesn't exist anymore."
Ospreys boss Mark Jones has welcomed the quartet returning from Wales camp, saying: "They've had limited game-time. Those four in particular, they are chomping at the bit to get some rugby under their belt so it's been good to get them back around the group."
Ulster sit fourth in the URC table, 11 points ahead of ninth-placed Ospreys, and Jones recognises the challenge they bring to south Wales.
"They bring a multi-pronged attack. They've got a very aggressive defence that forces a lot of turnovers, they are very aggressive at the contact area which creates turnover and they love to come alive off of those turnovers." said Jones.
"They punish teams badly and really make those turnovers count when you're in the unstructured phase of play."
Ulster include Bryn Ward at number eight among their contingent of Ireland Six Nations squad players who have been made available.
One common trait from Marist Liufau’s various draft profiles across the web back in 2024 included some form of the phrase “plays like his hair is on fire.” It was a common sentiment no doubt copied so often because it was so apt to his description.
Liufau, the Polynesian linebacker out of Notre Dame, is as famous for his flowing hair as he is the fire he plays with on the field. Few players pack the explosiveness Liufau brings to the table. The two-year vet’s primary problem hasn’t been desire, effort or ability, but assignments. That’s why when news broke the Dallas Cowboys were moving their 6-foot-2, 239-pound dynamo to outside linebacker in their new 3-4 defense, it can be seen as good news.
No NFL position is easy, per se, but a move outside does seem to simplify things for the 25-year-old defender. OLB in a 3-4 defense means, more often than not, Liufau will be a pass rusher. Drop back coverage assignments are there but typically less common. Run fits look a little easier, outside of the traffic inside, and on-ball production rewards explosive players such as Liufau searching for big plays.
Liufau hasn’t been seen much rushing the passer in his NFL career. In 2025 he only logged only 19 pass rush snaps, per PFF. But in his rookie season Liufau logged 69 pass rush snaps from that old off-ball position. On those plays PFF gave him a respectable 65.6 pass rush grade. Off-ball to edge isn’t a clean translation but a good pass rush grade is certainly something to be excited about.
If Liufau has anything it’s explosiveness, so playing on-ball could make him an impact player if, for no other reason, he can get off the line before anyone else. The Cowboys are thin in explosive edge players at the moment. Aside from Donovan Ezeiruaku (two sacks in 2025) and James Houston (5.5 sacks in 2025), Dallas doesn’t have much as far as outside rushers.
The need at edge is so obvious it’s a clear target for the Cowboys in the first round of the 2026 NFL draft. The Cowboys have been homing in on multiple pass rushing targets in their scouting combine interviews and seem dedicated to address the issue internally and externally over the offseason.
What percentage of snaps the Cowboys actually employ a 3-4 has yet to be discovered. Most teams live in nickel, and based on Christian Parker’s introductory press conference, he’s looking for players who can be versatile enough so he doesn’t have to constantly switch personnel. In that case, no one knows how frequently someone like Liufau will even be in this beneficial new role. But after two somewhat disappointing seasons in which Liufau’s play has been subpar and his snaps have been declining, change has to be seen as good. He's too talented to give up on.
Ulster have welcomed back four of their Ireland Six Nations squad members for Saturday's United Rugby Championship (URC) game against Ospreys, but forward Cormac Izuchukwu is ruled out after sustaining a concussion in training this week.
The second row, who made his Six Nations debut for Ireland against Italy in Dublin earlier this month, is following World Rugby Graduated Return to Play Protocols and it is unclear if he will be available for the Test team's game against Wales next week.
Backs Nathan Doak and Jude Postlethwaite, plus forwards Tom Stewart and Bryn Ward, are all named in head coach Richie Murphy's starting side for the visit to Wales (19:45 GMT kick-off).
Michael Lowry is selected at full-back, with Werner Kok and Zac Ward on the wings and James Hume and Postlethwaite in midfield.
Jack Murphy and Doak form the half-back partnership, with Eric O'Sullivan, Stewart and Scott Wilson in the front row.
Iain Henderson and Charlie Irvine combine in the second row, with Matthew Dalton, David McCann and Bryn Ward in the back row.
Conor McKee, Jake Flannery and Ben Carson offer the backs options on the replacements' bench, with Rob Herring, Angus Bell, Bryan O'Connor and Harry Sheridan the forward substitutes.
Ulster have won seven of their 10 games to date in the URC and lie eight points adrift of leaders Glasgow Warriors before the weekend's action commences, with a rearranged match against Edinburgh in hand.
Their opponents this weekend, Ospreys, sit ninth in the standings, 11 points worse off than Richie Murphy's side.
Ulster: Lowry; Kok, Hume, Postlethwaite, Z Ward; Murphy, Doak; O'Sullivan, Stewart, Wilson; Henderson, Irvine; Dalton, McCann, B Ward.
Feb. 27—The buses are packed, brackets are printed and the hotels are booked.
More state tournaments have arrived for prep programs in Idaho and Washington, and area schools are scattering across the two states in pursuit of championships in basketball, wrestling and cheer.
Today and Saturday, Idaho area teams will compete at the state level in wrestling.
Lewiston cheerleading will compete this weekend in the 5A state tournament.
This weekend is also the opening rounds for the Washington boys and girls state basketball tournaments. The round of 12 will begin on March 4 and will continue to the finals through March 7.
For Idaho boys basketball, the official state tournament will also begin on March 4 and continue through March 7, with state play-in games happening this weekend.
Here's a look at everything coming up:
Area schools strongly represented at Idaho state wrestling
Twelve schools are sending at least one wrestler to the wrestling state tournaments today, hosted at the Ford Idaho Center in Nampa.
In the 5A classification, Lewiston is sending seven boys wrestlers and three girls wrestlers.
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Moscow, also in the 5A classification, is sending three boys and two girls.
The rest of the smaller schools will compete at the 3A level.
The girls will wrestle in their weight class, with no distinction between levels.
On the boys side, Clearwater Valley is sending five wrestlers; Grangeville is sending four; Potlatch, Lapwai and Orofino are sending two; and Kamiah, Nezperce and Kendrick are sending one.
On the girls side, Prairie, Deary and Clearwater Valley are each sending one wrestler.
Lewiston boys coach Colton Maddy discussed three of his wrestlers in the top five seeding — fifth-seeded Coen Roberts (150 pounds), second-seeded Mason Faling (157) and second-seeded Parker Bagley (285) — and said they have a good chance at making it to the finals and possibly winning the entire tournament. He also said that the wrestlers who aren't seeded always have a chance and that unseeded runs happen every year.
"This was what the whole season was for," Maddy said. "This is what every tournament we go to is leading up to now. We always say, 'Everything else the rest of the season was all practice for the state tournament.' So the guys have put in the work. Our guys go through a tough schedule to prep them with the best competition they can get, to prep for this. And their hard work's paid off."
He said that heading up to the state tournament, he told his wrestlers to relax because they've already done most of the hard work. They have wrestled in tough tournaments and have wrestled at the Ford Idaho Center already. He told the wrestlers to "go out and cut loose, enjoy it and go wrestle your hardest."
"I think the boys are ready," Maddy said. "They put in the work. They're ready to strike. We got a couple of boys looking to make state championship runs, not just podium runs, but we got a couple guys looking to win in a complete title. So we'll see if they can get the job done."
The other 5A top-five-seeded wrestler is Moscow's Marcus Swift (138).
In 3A boys wrestling, the top-five-seeded wrestlers include Kendrick's Eian Schwecke (132) in the first seed, Kaden Schaff (120) of Nezperce also in the first seed and Orofino's Hunter Gamble (138) in the second seed.
On the girls side, Ciel Sattler (155) of Deary is the second seed, Avery Schacher (170) of Prairie is in the third seed and Jesse Rice (140) of Clearwater Valley is also in the third seed.
All the wrestlers and their weight classes are listed below:
3A BOYS
Clearwater Valley — Conner Christensen (165 pounds); Jaxon Green (150); Lander Mitzkus (285); Luke Nelson (126); Peter Fabbi (132).
Grangeville — Hollis Elliot (157); Liam Koehler (113); Luke Stark (120); Orrin Farmer (175).
Kamiah — Tanner Labrum (144).
Kendrick — Eian Schwecke (132).
Lapwai — Dante Davis (215); Joshua Arthur Jr. (285).
As the Idaho girls basketball state tournaments took place last week, all that remains for Idaho teams is the boys state tournaments.
Lewiston will represent the area in the Idaho Class 5A state tournament and is awaiting seeding.
The Bengals defeated the Sandpoint Bulldogs 72-54 in their district championship to clinch their spot in the state tournament.
Lewiston has the help of the scoring machine that is Royce Fisher who is coming off of two career-high performances of 33 and 35 points at Districts.
The Bengals also have difference makers in Jordan Walker, Blaze Hepburn and Mason Way.
Lewiston coach Brooks Malm said that the Bengals are proud to represent the city of Lewiston.
"It means a lot to everyone involved in our program to be able to represent the Lewiston community," Malm said. "This is a blue-collar town where people show up to work every day and we try to embody that with how we play. To receive the recognition and support the way we have from the community is really humbling."
Malm said that this team is ready to make the run to win it all.
"I think what this team has going for it are all the guys who have played before them," Malm said. "Whether it is the '09 (state champion) team that we honored last year, or the guys from last year's team who wish they could suit up for this year's tournament, our current team takes a lot of pride in playing for Lewiston. Having the experience from playing in the tournament last year has made us a better team throughout the year, and we look forward to the opportunity in front of us, whoever it may be."
In the Idaho Class 2A state tournament, the Kendrick Tigers have their spot locked in and are awaiting seeding. Prairie won the second-place game in the 2A Whitepine League district tournament and will compete in a state play-in game against Compass Charter at 2 p.m. Pacific on Saturday at McCall-Donnelly High School.
In the Idaho Class 1A state tournament, Timberline of Weippe will represent the 1A Whitepine League. St. John Bosco of Cottonwood took second place in the 1A Whitepine League district tournament and will face Greenleaf Friends at noon Pacific on Saturday at McCall-Donnelly in a state play-in game.
In the Idaho 3A, Orofino will play against Kellogg at 6 p.m. today at Orofino High School in a second-place game to determine a spot at State.
On the Washington side, there are three boys area teams at state tournaments. They will first play in the opening round to decide seeding of their respective tournament.
That includes undefeated Colfax as the No. 1 seed in the 2B classification. The Bulldogs will play Liberty Bell of Winthrop today at 8 p.m. at West Valley High School in Spokane.
2A-GSL-champion Pullman is the No. 4 seed in the 2A classification. The Greyhounds will face Tumwater at 4 p.m. on Saturday at West Valley.
Garfield-Palouse is the No. 14 seed in the 1B classification. The Vikings will play Muckleshoot Tribal today at 6 p.m. at Auburn High School.
There are four girls area teams at the state tournaments. They will also play in the opening round first to decide the seeding of their respective tournament.
Clarkston — the 2A-GSL-regular-season champ — is the No. 4 seed in the 2A classification. The Bantams will play Archbishop Murphy of Everett at 2 p.m. Saturday at Cheney High School.
Garfield-Palouse is the No. 2 seed and Pomeroy is the No. 13 seed in the 1B classification. The Vikings will play Pateros at 6 p.m. on Saturday at West Valley.
Pomeroy will face Naselle in a loser-out contest at noon on Saturday at Kelso High School.
Colfax is the No. 10 seed in the 2B classification. The Bulldogs will face Okanogan in a loser-out contest at 6 p.m. today at West Valley.
Lewiston cheerleading ready to make some noise
The Bengals cheer team won their district championship, beating Moscow, Lakeland and Sandpoint to send themselves to the 5A state tournament.
The state event is taking place on Saturday starting at 2:30 p.m. Pacific at Mountain America Center in Idaho Falls.
In the past two years, Lewiston has finished third at State and are trying to break out of the habit.
The cheerleading squad will do three routines and get scored on each one, which is how they would win it all, although they could also take first in the separate routines.
There is the show routine, the sideline routine and the pom routine, said Lewiston coach Heidi Hagen.
Points are awarded for the top-three placers in each routine.
"We had to drive a long way to get here but we're all we're excited," Hagen said. "We're happy to represent Lewiston, and we worked really hard this year, and we're ready to go do it."
Hagen said her expectation is to at least place in the top three again and to shoot for first.
"Lewiston has been placed at State the last two years, in 2024 and 2025, so we're hoping to do the same again and get a higher placing," Hagen said. "We're hoping to get like second place overall would be great as title would be great, but either way, we're gonna give it a go."
Junt can be reached at 208-848-2258, tjunt@lmtribune.com or on X @TrevorJunt.
The San Francisco 49ers allowed 222.3 passing yards per game in 2025, partially due to their struggling safety room, which was one of their youngest position groups with three of the four guys entering the NFL in the last three years.
San Francisco would need to upgrade the position in 2026 no matter what, but with the elder statesman, Jason Pinnock, hitting the market as well, they must bring in help in free agency or the draft.
With that, the 49ers are looking at some of the top safety prospects heading into the 2026 NFL draft, and earlier this week, they met with Texas' Michael Taaffe at the 2026 NFL combine.
Taaffe, 23, was a zero-star recruit out of Westlake High School in Austin, Texas, who originally committed to Rice, but he decided to accept a walk-on offer at Texas for the 2021 season.
After redshirting his first season with the Longhorns, Taaffe appeared in 53 games over the last four years and recorded 222 tackles, 14 passes defensed, seven interceptions, one forced fumble and one fumble recovery. He received All-SEC honors once (2025) and All-American honors twice (second-team in 2024 and first-team in 2025).
Taaffe was also the 2025 recipient of the Wuerffel Trophy which is awarded to the college football player "who best combines exemplary community service with athletic and academic achievement."
At this point in the offseason, San Francisco would likely be starting Ji'Ayir Brown and Malik Mustapha at safety with 2025 fifth-round pick Marques Sigle rotating in as needed. They could take Taaffe, who is expected to go on Day-3 of the draft, to at least provide more depth at the position.
However, the 49ers may want to improve their starting duo if they want to see a real difference in their back end in 2026.
Houston Rockets second-year guard Reed Sheppard has taken quite the leap in the 2025-26 season.
After a disappointing rookie season, the second-year guard has provided plenty of highlights in an expanded role with Fred VanVleet injured, perhaps none bigger than his second-half performance against the Magic on Thursday night. It looked like a game to forget for the Rockets, who trailed 76-57 late in the third quarter after Sheppard's turnover led to a Paolo Banchero dunk in transition.
From there, though, it was the Reed Sheppard show. He helped spur a 21-0 run for Houston, scoring or assisting on 13 of those points while lighting it up from deep. That run was enough to convince head coach Ime Udoka to finally let Sheppard close the game, and Udoka's faith was rewarded with multiple clutch threes from the 21-year-old to ice the comeback win.
It was only one game, but in one of Houston's best wins of the season, Sheppard proved why he should regularly close games for the Rockets.
Sheppard meeting the moment
Rockets 21-0 run, all 21 points were scored or assisted by Reed Sheppard or Kevin Durant. pic.twitter.com/3BDwrKMa9p
Sheppard finished with 20 points off the bench in the win, scoring 18 of those in the second half. He didn't even attempt a three-pointer in the first half, but hit five of them in the final two frames while shooting an efficient 7-for-11 from the field.
It's the type of confidence that Sheppard lacked in his first season with Houston, but one that's been on full display in his first year as a regular part of the rotation. When the Rockets needed a basket down the stretch, it was the 21-year-old who hit the clutch shots, not Kevin Durant.
At this point in the season, that type of production still likely won't be enough for Sheppard to enter the starting lineup. Udoka heavily implied earlier in the season that he wouldn't even consider bringing Amen Thompson off the bench despite his spacing issues on offense. Thompson was a team-worst -15 against Orlando, and the head coach subbed him out for good with eight and a half minutes left to let Sheppard run the offense.
It's clear that Sheppard's shooting ability is a better fit for Houston's offense, but if Udoka is determined to stick with Thompson, then the solution is to have him close games instead.
After watching the second-year guard's heroics down the stretch, there's no reason why he shouldn't be on the court in crunch time. The second-year guard showed he's deserving of more minutes in the win over Orlando, and Udoka needs to give Sheppard that opportunity, especially if he continues to play at the recent level he has.
"What he does for them on the offensive end—I mean, you saw how much easier their offense flowed, especially down the stretch in the 3rd quarter and the 4th quarter. I mean, you have to know where he is at all times, and that's something they've sort of been missing, so I'm a big… pic.twitter.com/JsSY2p3rsU
St Mirren manager Stephen Robinson has been speaking to the media as his side prepare for Saturday's trip to Livingston.
Here are the main points:
On having Richard King's red card in the 5-0 loss to Motherwell overturned, Robinson says "we weren't going to win the game anyway" but feels "common sense prevailed".
He admits the change of formation for that game was "a step too far" for his team "when confidence was low".
Robinson says "I'm my own biggest critic, when things aren't going well I'll be the first to note that" but stresses "it's important that the fans get right behind the players".
With St Mirren just two points above the relegation play-off spot, Robinson says his side are "not sleepwalking into trouble, we're very aware of where we are" but insists on their day they can "beat any team in the league".
He adds: "I don't think anybody in the bottom half is out of a relegation scrap. Our job is to get points on the board and also drag other people into this battle."
Robinson know "it's difficult to play when you're under pressure" but has urged the players to "rise above that".
He is ready for a "real difficult game on a difficult surface" at Livi and adds: "I don't care what way we do it, we have to find a way to win."
Robinson says: "You have to do the bare minimum to win football matches and we have to get back to doing that."
Robinson believes "lots of things have gone against us" but feels "it could still be a very good season" with the League Cup already in the bag and the potential to get to another semi-final at Hampden.
Team news: Declan John has been ill so will be a last-minute decision, Jonah Ayunga will start training next week but Conor McMenamin hasn't trained since Monday with a groin injury so will be assessed on Saturday.
Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola has been speaking to the media before Saturday's Premier League game against Leeds at Elland Road (kick-off 17:30 GMT).
Here are the key lines from his news conference:
Jeremy Doku had his first training session on Thursday but Guardiola was unable to give a timeframe for his return. He said: "I don't know. We will talk to the doctors afterwards."
Otherwise, there are no new injury concerns with everyone "very good" and "trained really well in the last two days".
On facing Real Madrid in the last 16 of the Champions League: "As much as you play against the best teams in the whole history of this competition, you learn and you improve and you're better in the future."
Guardiola said his players "have had a rest" in the last two weeks as they've only been playing on weekends but the training sessions have been "really good" too.
In response to facing Leeds, who have a strong home record: "Elland Road is Elland Road. We are ready for the challenge again. I've not been many times. Incredible stadium with a good vibe. There are a lot of Premier League stadiums that are traditional and this is one of them."
He said the late kick-off during Ramadan will play no part in his team selection as his players "will take care" and "know how to handle these situations" because "they are used to it".
Georgia Voll struck her second international century as Australia beat India by five wickets in the second ODI to complete the series win with a game to spare.
The 22-year-old top-scored with 101 from 82 balls, including 13 fours and one six, although she was aided in reaching the milestone by India's dismal fielding.
She was dropped on 19 by Kranti Gaud and 53 by Smriti Mandhana before a fumble from wicketkeeper Richa Ghosh when she was on 99 allowed her to sneak through for a single.
Voll and Phoebe Litchfield, who smashed 80 off 62, broke the back of Australia's chase of 252, putting on 119 runs for the second wicket after captain Alyssa Healy was bowled for six by Kashvee Gautam.
She added a further 82 (67) alongside Beth Mooney before becoming Gautam's second victim in the 31st over.
Deepti Sharma accounted for Mooney and Annabel Sutherland before Ash Gardner completed Australia's victory with 83 balls to spare, with the win sealing series victory in Healy's last in charge before her retirement.
Earlier, Pratika Rawal (52 off 81) enjoyed a 78-run opening stand with Mandhana before four wickets in 7.4 overs saw India slump to 103-4.
Captain Harmanpreet Kaur produced an anchoring 54 (70) at number four to help India post 251-9.
Gardner, Sutherland and Alana King took two wickets apiece.
According to ESPN senior reporter Jeremy Fowler, the Buffalo Bills are re-signing safety Sam Franklin Jr. to a three-year deal worth up to $7.5 million. Franklin played his first five NFL seasons with the Carolina Panthers, a run that ended ahead of the 2025 campaign.
Franklin's pro tenure began in 2020, when the Panthers signed the University of Temple product as an undrafted free agent. He'd reconnect with then-head coach Matt Rhule, who led the Owls in Franklin's very first collegiate season.
Over his stay in Carolina, Franklin recorded 105 combined tackles, a sack, an interception, a touchdown return and a forced fumble. The majority of his snaps (62.9 percent) came on special teams, where his play helped earn him a nod as a team captain in 2024.
He'd appear in all 19 games, including two playoff contests, for the Bills in 2025.
On Friday of the 2026 NFL combine, the defensive backs and tight ends will go through the on-field workouts. What's the level of need at these positions for the Jacksonville Jaguars, and who are some prospects to keep your eyes on?
Let's start with the level of need at each of those positions for the Jaguars.
At cornerback, the starting outside position opposite of Travis Hunter is available with Montaric Brown and Greg Newsome both free agents. Adding competition throughout the back end of the depth chart could be on the to-do list as well.
Then, with the safety spot, Andrew Wingard is a free agent, but still under contract are Eric Murray and Antonio Johnson. How urgently the Jaguars feel they have to address safety could be dependent on how they feel about Caleb Ransaw and Rayuan Lane stepping into larger roles.
Lastly, tight end is a bit of an under-the-radar need. Quintin Morris, who emerged as TE2 last season, is a free agent, while Johnny Mundt and Hunter Long are both in the final year of their deals.
Now, which prospects should you be watching on Friday?
Eli Stowers, TE, Vanderbilt
Stowers has been a big part of the Vanderbilt passinggame, totaling 152 targets over the last two seasons, along with over 1,400 yards and nine touchdowns. He's graded out as a so-so run-blocker by PFF's metrics.
Ephesians Prysock, CB, Washington
A corner with size at 6-4, Prysock allowed a completion rate of 58% last season and only 8.6 yards per catch. He came away with one interception and five pass breakups.
Genesis Smith, S, Arizona
Smith has had good ball production in his career and allowed a career-low 12.1 yards per catch in 2025. Missed tackles, however, have been an issue at times, with Smith recording a missed tackle rate of over 20%. Most of his snaps came at free safety.
The draw for the Europa League last 16 has been completed with English sides Aston Villa and Nottingham Forest learning their opponents.
Villa will face Ligue 1 side Lille, playing the first leg in France, while Forest will play Danish side Midtjylland with the first leg at the City Ground.
It is the second time Forest will face Midtjylland this season after losing 3-2 at home in the league phase during the short-lived Ange Postecoglou era.
Villa faced Lille two years ago in a two-legged quarter-final in the Conference League, eventually progressing on penalties after some memorable antics from Emi Martinez.
The first legs will be played on Thursday, 12 March, with the second legs a week later.
If Forest win they would face Stuttgart or Porto in the quarter-finals.
Villa would come up against Bologna or Roma at that stage if they progress.
Nottingham Forest and Aston Villa could meet in the semis, as their ties are on the same half of the draw.
Conor Coady has backed several LGBTQ+ inclusivity campaigns [Getty Images]
"You don't know what people are going through. I certainly don't know what people are going through. But the one way to learn is to listen. Can we listen and learn to make people's lives better when coming to the sport we all love?"
Conor Coady's message is clear.
The 33-year-old former England international says we should all be helping each other "in any walk of life" regardless of our sexuality or identity - or anything else for that matter.
"Football has given me everything in my life and I'd love it to give everybody else everything in their life as well," Coady tells BBC Sport.
"I'd support anybody on the streets, anybody who needs a bit of help. I've always been that sort of person, so for me it is about using our platform as footballers to try and help in any space we possibly can."
"I was asked a few years ago about the LGBTQ+ community and what it meant to them when they were trying to come to football or they were scared or things were going on at football they didn't like," Coady said.
It is a question he has always answered in the same way and how he believes "everybody should answer it" - or at least how he likes to think people would.
"I've heard plenty of people's stories about what they've been through growing up and what they're going through now," he said.
"I think being in the position that I'm in as a footballer, I'm in the greatest job in the world. I pinch myself every day of my life that I'm a footballer.
"So if we can help in any way, I think we should. If there's a little 1% that you can help with, then go and try and help.
"That's just something that I try and do as much as I can, not just in this community but in any walk of life."
Conor Coady won the football ally award in 2021 and helps raise awareness of LGBTQ+ issues in football [Getty Images]
The EFL's chief executive officer Trevor Birch says "we all have a role to play in creating an environment in which everyone feels they truly belong".
How can the football world help? Coady reiterated his advice to "listen and learn".
"Listen to people's stories and listen to what people have gone through," Coady said.
"I think that's the biggest way to gain experience and learn about different situations and different spaces people find themselves in."
The former Wolves, Leicester and Everton player is currently on loan at Championship side Charlton Athletic.
Coady will be watching from the stands as he is unable to face his parent club Wrexham, who visit The Valley on Saturday for the Addicks' ninth annual Football v Homophobia matchday.
"The players are the ones out there living and breathing the game," said Gary Ginnaw, the chair of Charlton Invicta - the club's affiliate LGBTQ+ friendly team.
"They're role models to so many people and they can really impact how society sees LGBTQ+ people.
"To understand the issue that LGBTQ+ people go through in football and in general is massively important."
If you witness homophobic or discriminatory abuse at a football match, it can be reported directly to clubs through Kick It Out, the EFL's reporting tool, or by alerting a steward.
Rangers head coach Danny Rohl has been speaking with the media before the derby visit of Celtic in the Scottish Premiership on Sunday.
Here are the key points:
On Celtic midfielder Luke McCowan's claim following their win over Stuttgart that "no team in that league touches us" if they are on form, Rohl says: "I think at the moment we are in the second position. They are behind us. I think they have at the moment seven or eight defeats. I think in general it makes no sense to speak too much about the other side. We have to focus on ourselves. We want to win this game. I see my team is ready to take points and then we will see on Sunday."
Rohl is relishing his first Old Firm fixture in charge at Ibrox having seen his side come from a goal down to win 3-1 at Celtic Park in January in what proved Wilfried Nancy's last match in charge.
He says: "For me that was one of the biggest moments so far. When you are a manager and you have the chance to play at home this kind of games, then you are also on fire. We are on fire. I feel the belief. We are ready."
Rangers remain unbeaten domestically this year under Rohl, who insists no matter the outcome, neither team will be out of the title race: "It's a crucial game, but no team will be out after this game because there are still 27 points you can take."
He concedes this could be the biggest game of his managerial career given the stakes: "It's a crucial one because when you come closer and closer to the end of the season then you know every game is important."
The German pointed to Rangers' ability to come from behind in big games having done so at Celtic Park and in the recent win at home to leaders Hearts when they twice levelled before winning 4-2.
Rohl adds: "I think do it with a hot heart and a smart mind. If we do this then we have a big chance, we have a clear idea of what we want to do. We have also some different solutions, how we can hurt them. You have to believe. I think this game is not about the legs, it's about the mind, the brain, how ready you are in these moments and if you do this, then let's see.
Rohl says he is interested to see what Celtic do with the goalkeeping position after Viljami Sinisalo impressed against Stuttgart in Kasper Schmeichel's absence.
On the idea of looking to retain on loan Tottenham winger Mikey Moore next season, Moore says: "I think he made a fantastic development since I'm here. He showed his quality. He's still a young player. He took a lot of good experience now in this year."
Dujon Sterling and Ryan Naderi are both training with a decision to be made if they are to be in the squad.
Chelsea and Paris St-Germain are the current holders of the Fifa Club World Cup and Champions League respectively [Getty Images]
Chelsea will play holders Paris St-Germain in the Champions League round of 16 while Manchester City will face Real Madrid in the knockout stages for a fifth straight season.
Although six Premier League clubs have qualified for the last 16 there will be no all-English ties, with leaders Arsenal to face Bayer Leverkusen.
Newcastle United will meet Barcelona, Liverpool take on Galatasaray and Tottenham have been drawn against Atletico Madrid.
The first legs will be played on 10 and 11 March, with the second legs to take place on 17 and 18 March.
Newcastle are at home for their first leg with Barca, while their Premier League rivals are all away.
The final will be played at the Puskas Arena in Budapest, Hungary, on Saturday, 30 May.
"The supporters want to see the team, their team, showing what we've shown over a long period of time since I've been in [charge]," Sadler told BBC Radio WM.
"But we haven't shown that in the last four weeks. We haven't shown that consistently enough.
"So from their point of view, we've got to give them something to shout about, which more often than not we have done."
'We don't want a season that promised so much and didn't deliver'
Walsall travel to in-form Shrewsbury Town on Saturday hoping to end their current run of seven games without a win.
"It's up to us to reverse our momentum now," Sadler said.
"At the moment we're in a tough run of form, but we've got to return to form really quickly because we don't want the season to peter out. We don't want it to be a season that promised so much and didn't deliver.
"And as it stands with the way the table is, a couple of games in hand, all that sort of stuff, the season's all there to play for.
"But the season will only be all there to play for if we reverse our momentum, if we get back playing how we've expected each other to play. We haven't done that for four weeks.
"The proof will be in the pudding. There's no point me saying that and we don't produce.
"So it's up to us to produce when Saturday comes, and we've got a squad who've done it before for us."
Cowan's 'great' job at Shrewsbury
Sadler had two spells with Shrewsbury as a player and has watched their transformation away from relegation trouble under new head coach Gavin Cowan with interest.
Walsall travel to Croud Meadow attempting to stop Salop winning a sixth league game in a row.
"Gav's done a great job. They've got a real connection between players and the supporters and the staff," Sadler said.
"It's a fantastic opportunity for us to go into the form team of the division and take them on and that's the challenge.
"They've got that momentum, but it's up to us to turn ours back the other way."
It is the obvious question to ask after two chastening defeats which have ended any prospect of a first title since 2020.
However, every England fan can see what has gone wrong for Steve Borthwick's side: they are not scoring enough points and are conceding far too many.
The aerial game is not working and players who were so composed and accurate during a 12-match winning streak are making consistent and uncharacteristic errors – whether in terms of decision-making, discipline or execution of skills.
So instead of asking what has gone wrong, the question is more why has it gone wrong? And how will England put it right against Italy and France over the next two rounds?
Sitting in unseasonably warm February sunshine at the team's Bagshot training base, head coach Steve Borthwick was in a relaxed but defiant mood as he tried to provide some answers - and some solutions - to England's alarming slide.
The England boss has highlighted three areas where his team were exposed by Ireland in the record 42-21 loss in London - profligacy in the opposition 22, the gifting of turnover ball to the Irish, and, perhaps most glaringly, a lack of physical intensity.
"We had plenty of chances to score in the first 20 minutes. And if you don't take your chances in Test match rugby it can be very cruel," Borthwick explained.
"Secondly, we turned over too many balls, creating unstructured opportunities for Ireland to attack from, which makes it very, very hard to defend. So we put ourselves in a vulnerable position.
"And thirdly, and probably most importantly, the intensity that has become a trademark of the team - it wasn't at the level we have set for ourselves."
For Borthwick, the three are inter-linked. A failure to exert scoreboard pressure led to a snowball effect and a game that was quickly out of reach. Physically, England were slow in terms of both thought and deed.
"We failed to take those opportunities and the opposition take their opportunities and suddenly there is scoreboard pressure against you," he added.
"That is clearly an area of development for us."
But how do you fix this? There had been an expectation that England would be smarting after the Calcutta Cup defeat, and would put it right against Ireland. Instead, the opposite happened.
Borthwick has pledged to raise the bar in training to prepare the group for the showdown in Rome, with a focus on sharpening their attacking edge in opposition territory.
"We have discussed all aspects of the preparation with the players. We need to drive even further what we are doing in training, and how hard we train. I think we can go further [in training]," he said.
"We need to be much more clinical and there are multiple factors involved [when it comes to finishing chances]. There is a mixture of the physicality needed in the collision area, with the composure you need to make those key decisions at the right time.
"We will be making sure we put the players in those positions as often as possible to ensure we get improvement."
England players under the microscope
Has complacency been an issue? Are England in the right place mentally?
Former England boss Eddie Jones has suggested that Borthwick's public pre-tournament ambition to compete for the title in Paris on the final day contributed to a lack of focus in the group, a claim the current head coach rejects.
"I discussed that you only get to that point [a title decider] by taking it one step at a time," Borthwick insisted.
"Our focus has been very much on one game at a time."
However, Borthwick says he is open-minded as he plots his selection to face the Azzurri.
There will need to be a change at scrum-half with Alex Mitchell ruled out, while centre Ollie Lawrence is missing training this week with a knee problem.
Elsewhere, George Furbank has returned to Northampton and will play in the Premiership Rugby Cup this weekend, and could provide a creative outlet from full-back if he proves his fitness with the Saints. Furbank's presence should help with England's blunt attack.
But few players who started the games in Edinburgh and at Twickenham have made a compelling case to keep their places. While always reluctant to make sweeping changes, Borthwick has not ruled out wielding the axe.
Everyone in the squad will now be under the microscope, whether in England training or beyond.
"In some positions the squad is fiercely competitive," he said. "I have got some tough decisions to make there.
"I will be watching the players, watching how they train, watching how they perform, watching the players who are returning to their clubs this weekend to get game time and watching how they play."
'Disappointment and frustration'
Borthwick has sought inspiration from the World Cup-winning crop of 2003 in a fallow week, with nine of that all-conquering group spending Wednesday evening in camp in a meeting arranged in advance of the Six Nations.
"The players from the 2003 squad performed under incredible pressure, but had numerous setbacks and numerous tough losses," he said.
Now the pressure is ratcheting up on the class of 2026. England have never lost to Italy in the Championship's 26-year history.
"There is always expectation on the England team. Always," Borthwick said.
"Our expectation on ourselves is really high and I don't think our performance levels have come to what we expect of ourselves over the last two weeks.
"Did we want these two losses? Absolutely not. Did we want the performances to be better? Yes, absolutely. I feel that disappointment and frustration more than anybody else. I am deeply passionate about this team.
"What we will do is make sure we move forward from this point and we will make sure we put in a level of performance that steps up next week."
In a further comment on his Rugby Unity podcast, Jones mused that the atmosphere at the final whistle at the Allianz Stadium after the Ireland defeat reminded him of the fraught end to his seven-year tenure in 2022.
So is Borthwick's job under threat? At the moment, no. It is too early for talk of that. It is just two games, albeit bad ones, following an impressive 12-match winning streak.
Borthwick is deep in planning for the 2027 World Cup and the RFU is firmly behind that project.
However, not only has no England side ever lost in Rome, but never before have England ended a Six Nations campaign with a single win. Two more defeats would lead to some very serious conversations in the corridors of Twickenham.
After the Calcutta Cup victory at Murrayfield, Scotland captain Sione Tuipulotu spoke to the BBC with searing honesty. He said the team owed under-pressure boss Gregor Townsend a performance to quieten the noise around his future. According to Tuipulotu, they did it for Townsend.
The next two weeks would be a good time for the England players to do similar for their head coach.
The NFL scouting combine opened on Thursday at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana. A total of 319 prospects were invited to Indianapolis, including seven former Vols.
Place-kickers, defensive linemen and linebackers took part in drills on Thursday. Tight ends and defensive backs will take part in on-field drills Friday, while quarterbacks, wide receivers and running backs are scheduled for Saturday. Offensive linemen will conclude drills on March 1.
Below are results from former Vols at the NFL combine on Thursday.
Bryson Eason
Eason played at Tennessee from 2020-25. In 61 games, he recorded 105 tackles, 22 tackles for a loss, 4.5 sacks, five pass deflections and two fumble recoveries.
Arm length: 33.13 inches
Hand size: 10 inches
Wingspan: 78.75 inches
40-yard dash: 5.09 seconds
Vertical jump: 30.50 inches
Broad Jump: 9 feet 4 inches
20-yard shuttle: 5.00 seconds
Combine score: 64
Joshua Josephs
Josephs played at Tennessee from 2022-25. In 48 games, he recorded 104 tackles, 22 tackles for a loss, 9.5 sacks, nine pass deflections, six forced fumbles and four fumble recoveries. Josephs did not participate in drills at the NFL scouting combine.
Texas A&M (19-9, 9-6 SEC) couldn't withstand No. 20 Arkansas's elite offensive surge late in the second half of Wednesday's game, falling to the Razorbacks 99-84, despite reserve forward Zach Clemence's career-high 29 points, as the Kansas transfer has continued to make a significant impact over the latter half of the regular season.
While the Aggies shot 53% from the field, the Aggies only made eight three pointers, needing to reach their average of 11 or more to have a chance at pulling off the upset. Even worse, Arkansas star freshman guard Darius Acuff, who is averaging 22.2 points per game and shooting nearly 50% from the field, was held to five points and 1-10 from the field in the first half, but exploded late in the game for 22 points.
The Aggies had their chances, cutting into what was a 17-point lead to five points, thanks to Clemence's elite play, but the lack of defensive stops, which has been a problem on the road this season, resulted in the Razorbacks retaking a double-digit lead and sealing the win over the final two minutes.
Moving on, Texas A&M needs at least two more regular-season wins and will now host Texas on Saturday afternoon in what will likely be viewed as a "must-win" after defeating the Longhorns on the road earlier this season. First-year head coach Bucky McMillan and his veteran squad need to refocus on the task ahead.
Before Wednesday's loss, the Aggies moved down ESPN Bracketologist's updated bracket to his "First Four Out," and as of Friday, the Aggies are trending down, but have not moved off that line. Texas, also one of the first four out teams, has now lost back-to-back games to Georgia and Florida, falling to the Gators 84-71 at home on Wednesday.
Texas A&M's offense should be able to score on the Longhorns, who have struggled defensively, allowing 75.7 points per game, while the Aggies are shooting 47% from the field and have looked much better over the last two games, but need to cut down on the turnovers.
Texas A&M will host Texas on Saturday afternoon at 3:00 p.m., with coverage on ESPN2.
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.
There isn’t a position the Los Angeles Rams need to address more than cornerback. It was a glaring hole last offseason, too, and after opting not to address it, the secondary cost the Rams in the NFC title game against the Seattle Seahawks.
The good news is this year’s class is outstanding. That’ll be on display Friday during on-field workouts and testing at the NFL combine, a position the Rams should be watching closely. With Mansoor Delane and Jermod McCoy opting not to participate in drills, these are the seven corners for Los Angeles to watch.
Chris Johnson, San Diego State
Johnson should intrigue the Rams with his inside-outside versatility, showing the ability to play on the boundary or in the slot. For a team that likes to move defenders around, that's an asset. Plus, he was downright dominant in coverage last season, allowing just 18 catches on 43 targets for a total of 185 yards. He didn't give up a single touchdown catch and picked off four passes.
As a second-round prospect, Johnson fits what the Rams should be looking for at the cornerback position.
Colton Hood, Tennessee
Hood isn't the biggest cornerback at 5-foot-11 but he plays the position physically and is a willing tackler in run support. Though he gets overlooked sometimes by his teammate Jermod McCoy, Hood is excellent in coverage and has impressive aggressiveness on the outside. Look for him to be a late first-round pick or early second-rounder, right in the range of when the Rams pick at No. 29.
Brandon Cisse, South Carolina
Cisse should be a target for the Rams at the end of the first round. He’s one of the best corners in this class, bringing great athleticism to the table. His ball skills leave something to be desired but everywhere else, he’s really impressive.
At the combine on Friday, he should wow scouts with his athleticism, potentially sending his stock higher. Plus, his ability in run support gives him an edge over some other corners.
Avieon Terrell, Clemson
Terrell lacks some size at 5-11 but he’s excellent in coverage and is position-versatile as a nickel in the slot or a boundary corner. After Delane and McCoy, he might be the highest-rated corner in the draft, especially for teams that are looking for guys with position flexibility.
The brother of Falcons standout corner A.J. Terrell, Avieon is likely to be a Day 1 starter in the NFL, potentially for the Rams if they see him as the best corner available when they go on the clock.
D’Angelo Ponds, Indiana
Ponds will stir up a lot of debate among evaluators because of his smaller stature. He’s only 5-9, which is undersized for a boundary cornerback, but what he lacks in height he makes up for in competitiveness and technique. The national champion corner was one of the best in the country last season, and though he’ll likely need to move inside in the NFL, there’s no reason to believe he won’t be able to make that transition. He’s plenty physical enough to cover the slot and help in run support.
Keionte Scott, Miami
If the Rams want a fiery and physical corner, Scott is their guy. He’s like a bulldog in the secondary, always willing to mix it up and stick his nose in the action at the line of scrimmage. That play style sets the tone for the entire defense, which carries value. Last season alone, he had 13 tackles for a loss, five sacks and two interceptions, both of which were returned for touchdowns.
As a slot defender, Scott plays like a safety and can cover like a corner.
Tacario Davis, Washington
If the Rams are looking for some size on the outside to help replace Ahkello Witherspoon, Davis should warrant some consideration. He’s 6-4, 200 pounds, which is wiry for a defensive back but helps him in coverage. NFL.com’s Lance Zierlein sees him as a better zone corner than man defender, making him a good fit for the Rams. With his slimmer frame, run support isn’t a strong suit of Davis’, but the Rams need guys who can cover first and stop the run second.
Jack Doohan says he received death threats and had to call police to resolve an encounter with armed men at about the time of last year’s Miami Grand Prix, just before he lost his Formula One drive with Alpine.
The Australian driver said in the latest series of Netflix documentary Drive To Survive, released on Friday, that he had been threatened by email, describing the atmosphere around what proved to be his final race as “pretty heavy stuff”.
Doohan made his debut for Alpine in the last race of 2024 and was dropped and replaced by Franco Colapinto after Miami, the sixth race of 2025. He is now a reserve driver for Haas.
“I got serious death threats for this Grand Prix, saying they’re going to kill me here if I’m not out of the car,” Doohan said in the documentary. “I had six or seven emails saying if I’m still in the car by Miami, that I’ll be, you know, all my limbs will be cut off.”
Doohan also described an incident where he saw three “armed men”, adding that “I had to call my police escort to come get it under control”.
He did not specify how that incident was resolved, and did not identify anyone responsible.
After Colapinto replaced him at Alpine in May, Doohan posted on social media that he and his family had been facing online abuse, and indicated at the time that fans from Colapinto’s home country of Argentina were responsible.
The duo were the only two drivers in F1 last season not to score a point as Alpine finished last in the constructors’ standings.
The NFL offseason is officially here, and all eyes will turn toward the 2026 NFL draft. The first day will feature only the first round, the second day will feature the second and third rounds, and the draft will conclude with the final four rounds on the third day.
This year, the NFL Draft Main Theater and Main Stage will be located just outside Acrisure Stadium on Pittsburgh's North Shore, placing the Draft at the heart of one of the country's most recognizable sports districts.
We're looking at five realistic targets for the Eagles on defense with the No. 23 pick.
Keldric Faulk, ED, Auburn
A dynamic and versatile pass rusher, Faulk ranked eighth in the SEC with 45 total pressures in 2024 according to Pro Football Focus. Overall, Faulk finishes his college career with 73 total tackles, 19.5 tackles for loss, and 10 sacks.
A grown man pass rusher and force off the edge, the 6-foot-3, 265-pound edge rusher just enjoyed his most productive season in his final year at Miami, totaling 63 tackles, 12.5 sacks, and four forced fumbles.
McNeil-Warren is a tall safety prospect who will attract interest from several NFL teams, following the successful transitions of Quinyon Mitchell and other Toledo defenders. He received Second-Team All-American honors from the Sporting News and the FWAA, as well as Third-Team All-American recognition from the AP, becoming only the second Toledo player to make the AP All-America team in 18 years. He was named to the PFF All-America Team and recognized as the PFF G-6 Defensive Player of the Year, being the only MAC player and one of just two G5 players on the defensive roster. Additionally, he earned First-Team All-MAC honors and was named a semifinalist for the Jim Thorpe Award, which honors one of the nation's top defensive backs. He is the first Rocket since Barry Church in 2009 to be a Thorpe semifinalist and the first MAC defensive back since Shawun Lurry in 2015.
Thomas was named to the 2024 All-SEC Second Team and received recognition as a second-team All-American by both the Associated Press and the AFCA. He was selected for the All-SEC First Team by the coaches and the All-SEC Second Team by the Associated Press. He was also a semifinalist for the Bednarik Award. Thomas is a dynamic pass rusher with the speed and agility who recorded 15.5 sacks over the last two seasons, including 6.5 sacks in 10 games in 2025. He also had 25.5 tackles for loss for the Sooners' defense in 2024 and 2025. Among edge players in the SEC with at least 106 pass rush snaps, Thomas finished ninth in pass rush productivity, according to Pro Football Focus.
The former Texas A&M senior edge rusher could be a top 15 pick after declaring for the 2026 NFL Draft, after recording a career high 11.5 sacks, combined with over 40 pressures during his final season in College Station, as the former Bowling Green standout was one of the more feared players in the country.
Terrell, an Atlanta native, is the younger brother of Falcons cornerback A.J. Terrell, who also attended Clemson and was a first-round NFL Draft pick in 2020. Terrell finished the 2025 season with a team-high five forced fumbles and 11 pass-breakups. During his three years at Clemson, Terrell accounted for 125 total tackles, 25 passes defended, four sacks, eight forced fumbles, and three interceptions.
Young, a transfer from Michigan State, started all 13 games at the JACK position last season. He recorded a total of 23 tackles, including 9 solo tackles, 9.5 tackles for loss (TFL), and a team-high 9.0 sacks, along with one interception. His average of 0.69 sacks per game ranked him 19th nationally and fourth in the SEC. According to Pro Football Focus, he was the 34th-ranked pass rusher in the nation with a grade of 80.9, and He ranked 13th nationally among all edge players in Pass Rush Productivity (PRP) with a score of 10.5, which is calculated using a formula that combines sacks, hits, and hurries relative to the number of times he rushes the passer. PFF credited him with 37 quarterback hurries and nine quarterback hits. Young was also named to the Second Team All-SEC by league coaches.
Wisconsin basketball (19-9, 11-6 Big Ten) fell to the Oregon Ducks on Wednesday night.
Greg Gard's group is projected as a No. 7 seed in CBS Sports' latest bracketology with a projected matchup against No. 10-seed Auburn.
The outlet updated its NCAA Tournament bracket forecast on Wednesday morning, following UW's loss to Oregon and ahead of a highly-anticipated Big Ten contest between No. 8 Purdue and No. 13 Michigan State. Wisconsin is now sandwiched between No. 6 seed Kentucky and No. 8 seed Miami in the Midwest bracket.
After collecting quality wins over Michigan, Illinois and Michigan State, the Badgers' stock has dropped over the program's recent stretch. Wisconsin did secure an 84-71 win over the Iowa Hawkeyes on Sunday, but its blowout loss to Ohio State and surprising defeat against Oregon have prompted pundits to alter the team's position in national hierarchies.
Wisconsin entered its contest against the Ducks with a chance to secure a double-bye in the Big Ten Tournament, but it now faces an almost impossible circumstance ahead of its final stretch. UW concludes the 2025-26 regular season with games against Washington, Maryland and No. 8 Purdue.
The Oklahoma Sooners closed out their home regular season schedule with a dominant 89-44 win over the Arkansas Razorbacks. It was their fifth straight win, and it came on senior night for Raegan Beers, Payton Verhulst, and Beatrice Culliton.
The 45-point win is the second-highest margin of victory in program history. Earlier this year, the Sooners set a program record with a 48-point win over Mississippi State.
Oklahoma's offense was awesome on Thursday night, with all five starters scoring in double figures, led by true freshman Aaliyah Chavez's 16 points. Raegan Beers recorded her 19th double-double of the season with 11 points and 11 rebounds. Verhulst added 14 points, Zya Vann scored 13 and Sahara Williams had 12. Oklahoma also received 11 points off the bench from forward Brooklyn Stewart, who also had a career-high 15 rebounds in the game.
Keziah Loftin contributed eight points off the bench in the win.
Oklahoma shot 45.1% from the field and held Arkansas to 22% shooting for the game. The Razorbacks didn't make a field goal in the fourth quarter, marking the second time this season that an Oklahoma opponent failed to hit a bucket from the field in the fourth.
With the win, the Sooners are guaranteed a top-eight seed in the SEC women's basketball tournament. A win over Missouri on Sunday and the Sooners will earn the No. 5 seed in the tournament.
With the way Oklahoma is closing the regular season, they're in a strong position to host the first two rounds of the NCAA tournament in Norman and could climb as high as a three-seed.
The Sooners take on Missouri in the regular season finale in Columbia, Missouri, at 1 p.m. CT on ESPN+.
Contact/Follow us @SoonersWire on X (formerly known as Twitter), and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Oklahoma news, notes, and opinions.You can also follow John on X @john9williams.
Kayvon Thibodeaux’s future with the New York Giants grew more uncertain on Thursday.
The Giants hold the fifth-year option on Thibodeaux, which would pay him $14.75 million for the 2026 season. They can exercise this option or explore trading the 25-year-old pass rusher.
In 2025, Thibodeaux recorded 2.5 sacks across 10 games (limited by a shoulder injury that ended his year early). Despite this down year, he remains a foundational piece of the Giants’ pass rush as a four-year veteran and former No. 5 overall pick.
However, the team is positioned to test the trade market this offseason.
SNY’s Connor Hughes reports that Thibodeaux is considered attainable for the right price, with other teams believing a deal is likely.
Kayvon Thibodeaux, per sources, is a player the #Giants are listening to offers on and the belief from teams here at the combine is that he will eventually get dealt.
I do not get the same sentiment on Dexter Lawrence. This staff loves him & wants him.
If the Giants move Thibodeaux, their front office could address needs elsewhere via trade or free agency. The team would still have strong options to lead the outside linebacker/edge group in 2026, including Brian Burns and rookie Abdul Carter.
Nebraska basketball defeated the Maryland Terrapins by a score of 74-61 on Wednesday evening. It was a game that saw Nebraska trailing with just over ten minutes remaining before pulling away in an 18-3 run to secure the victory.
This game saw Braden Frager shine. He scored 21 total points on six-of-13 shooting from the field. Pryce Sandfort also chipped in 16 points. He was the leading rebounder on a night when the Huskers needed all the help they could get on the boards, finishing with eight.
Nebraska led 33-27 at the half and held off a Terrapins team that possessed tremendous length and size. Nevertheless, they were able to hold off the opposition for the 24th win of the season.
Social media was buzzing following the victory, as the Huskers secured another key win at home. We picked some of the best reactions in what was a successful night overall.
Contact/Follow us @CornhuskersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Nebraska news, notes and opinions.
For basketball fans in the Wayne/Holmes County area, Saturday, Feb 28 is going to be jam-packed with girls basketball action.
Eight district finals featuring Wayne/Holmes County teams will take place this weekend to determine who will be moving on to next week's regional tournament. What's noteworthy is that the No. 1 ranked team in the Wooster Daily Record's final power rankings in Hiland won't be one of the eight teams playing for a district title on Saturday.
To dive into all the games, we'll take a look at one possible key factor that each team might need to do well in their matchups in order to come away victorious.
No. 3 seed Twinsburg (19-5) vs No. 21 seed Wooster (12-11), Medina High School, 4:00 p.m.
Key Factor for Wooster: Defending
Wooster got a 15-point road win at Mayfield in their district semifinal game and will have a stern test on their hands in the district final against Twinsburg, No. 2 ranked team in Division II by MaxPreps. If Wooster wants to have a chance in this one, they must defend at a high level, try to slow down the Tigers three double-digit scorers in Kayla Cellura, Taylor Dye and Jaci Hutton, and look to make it a low-scoring affair.
Division IV District Final
No. 1 seed Carrollton (16-8) vs No. 4 seed West Holmes (10-12), Dover High School, 1:00 p.m.
Key Factor for West Holmes: Keep it close and try to win it late
Carrollton will be expected to win this on Saturday, but if there's one way West Holmes can pull this off, it just might be winning a close game. In five of the Knights' 10 wins this season, they won by less than 10 points. They did that versus Morgan in their 45-41 district semifinal victory. Against Carrollton, West Holmes' strategy could be keeping it close heading into the fourth quarter and count on your top two players in Briar Cline (11 points vs Morgan) and Zalina Proper (19 points vs Morgan) to make enough late-game plays to win it.
Division VI District Finals
No. 1 seed Rootstown (20-3) vs No. 13 seed Smithville (14-10), Norwayne High School, 1:00 p.m.
Key Factor for Smithville: Continued heavy production from Leah Keib
With Smithville losing two important seniors in Madi Singer and Aly Wickens from last season's 23-4 team that won the Wayne County Athletic League title and was a regional finalist, the Smithies have leaned more and more this year on senior do-it-all forward/guard Leah Keib. That was never more evident than against Loudonville in Smithville's 46-44 district semifinal overtime win, where Keib not only scored a game-high 24 points but was the Smithies main ball-handler that got the team into their half-court offense, had double-teams thrown at her late and was dependable in the fourth quarter/overtime periods.
Said Smithville head coach Eric Nickles after their victory over Loudonville, "We rely on Leah Keib a lot. She's probably averaged closed to 20 points per game in the second half of the year. As a senior, she's playing her best at this time of the year."
Keib will have to continue to carry Smithville — especially in the scoring department — if they want to get past No. 1 seed Rootstown (No. 14 ranked team in Division VI) and last year's Division VI state semifinalists. Rootstown and Smithville have made a habit of playing each other of late, having matched up three times since the start of last season.
"We played Rootstown now three times in the last year in a half," Nickles said. "Once in the regional final (Rootstown defeated Smithville in last year's regional final 37-36) and twice in the regular season (Rootstown beat Smithville 47-34 at home in 2025; Rootstown won at Smithville 48-44 on Feb. 10). We're excited to get the opportunity again. They're a fantastic team and well-coached. We're going to have to take care of the basketball. They pressure you the whole game."
Apart from her being able to put Smithville on her back, Keib said the Smithies team defense will play a large factor in Saturday's result.
"Play defense. Good defense," said Keib after the Loudonville win, pointing out what her team needs to do well to beat Rootstown. "We played them two weeks ago. Colbie Curall scored in the 20s. We played gap defense and we didn't do a good job helping. She just got into the lane, so I think we're gonna focus on that."
No. 3 seed Richmond Heights (19-5) vs No. 8 Dalton (18-6), Norwayne High School, 4:00 p.m.
Key Factor for Dalton:Balanced Scoring
Dalton (18 wins) are coming off two thumping victories over Newton Falls (44-5) and Lake Center Christian (70-38) in the district tournament, and something the Bulldogs have done well all season is have balanced scoring amongst their main rotation players. Whether it's Payton Lehman, Phoebe Lehman, Grace Dorffer, Mei Simmons, Mya Geiser or Ella Tomlinson, all six are capable of hitting double figures in any game.
In 14 games this season, Dalton has scored 50 points or more and they will need to keep that up against a Richmond Heights team that has had 16 games where they've held their opponent under 30 points. On top of the Bulldogs going up against an Ohio Ms. Basketball candidate in senior guard Honor Hall (averaging 20 points, 5 rebounds, 5 steals per game), Dalton's balanced scoring could pay dividends in getting the victory.
No. 5 seed Salineville Southern (24-0) vs No. 7 seed Waynedale (17-7), Girard High School, 1:00 p.m.
Key Factor for Waynedale: Outside shooting
Waynedale was able to come away with a 17-point road win versus a 20-3 Mineral Ridge team, who was seeded higher than the Golden Bears. One of the strengths for Waynedale this season is their outside shooting. When the Golden Bears get hot from three-point line with shooters like Kylie Geiser, Natalie Clever, Izzy Matter and Jorjia Persinger, they are capable of beating a lot of teams.
A hot shooting night against an undefeated Salineville Southern team could benefit Waynedale in getting the victory, and given that Waynedale has played a tougher schedule according to MaxPreps (Waynedale rates at a 4.9; Salineville Southern at -7.3), could also prove to work in the Golden Bears favor as well.
Division V District Finals
No. 2 seed Norwayne (21-2) vs No. 21 seed Mentor Lake Catholic (8-15), Wellington High School, 1:00 p.m.
Key Factor for Norwayne: Keep doing what they've been doing
Fresh off clinching the WCAL title last week against Chippewa, Norwayne has been in cruise control in their first two district tournament games, winning by scores of 83-8 and 65-19. Honestly, against a Mentor Lake Catholic team that has a record below .500, Norwayne shouldn't have any problems.
The Bobcats should just keep doing what they've been doing as of late. Winning the inside battle through scoring and on the glass. Getting in transition. Playing sound half-court defense. They are the No. 4-ranked team in Division V for a reason.
No. 6 seed LaGrange Keystone (21-3) vs No. 11 seed Triway Titans (18-6), Wellington High School, 4:00 p.m.
Key Factor for Triway: Leaning on the senior duo of Payton Snyder and Sydney Frank
Triway is entering Saturday's district final coming off an 47-42 road upset win of top-seeded LeBrae, who was ranked No. 12 in Division V. Winners in 10 of their last 11 games, the Titans are a group in fine form right now and a big reason is because of their senior duo in guard Payton Snyder and forward Sydney Frank. If those two can both produce noticeable performances against a Keystone team that will be favored, a district title could be in store for Triway.
No. 5 seed Chippewa (16-8) vs No. 12 seed Poland Seminary (17-7), Peninsula High School, 4:00 p.m.
Key Factor for Chippewa: Stay strong on the glass
Depending on the amount of size and the level of go-getters Poland Seminary have hitting the glass, rebounding the ball will be of big importance for Chippewa. The Chipps were troubled in the rebounding department in their WCAL title game loss against Norwayne last week, and because Chippewa has a more smaller lineup (works in their favor really well) they could be prone to struggle on the glass on some nights. Chippewa will be favored in this game either way, but having the rebounding edge could make them even stronger.
How many SEC teams will reach the NCAA Tournament?
After setting a record with 14 teams for the 2025 edition of March Madness, there are a wide variety of outcomes as the regular season approaches its final stretch.
From our vantage point, there are six locks, but five bubble teams have a meaningful case. The picture will come into clearer focus over the next three weeks.
In the meantime, here are our latest SEC Men's Basketball Power Rankings.
A stunning fall reached a new low point in the loss to LSU, moving the Rebels to the bottom of these power rankings and the conference standings.
Last week: 14
Record: 11-16, 3-12
Jackson Fuller covers Arkansas football, basketball and baseball for the Southwest Times Record, part of the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at jfuller@usatodayco.com or follow him @jacksonfuller16 on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Today in Boston Celtics history, the storied franchise signed Stephon Marbury as a free agent in 2009. The Brooklyn, New York native elected to sign with the Celtics after he was bought out by the New York Knicks in the wake of a major fall-out with the head coach of the Knicks at that time, Mike D'Antoni. The Marbury stint in Boston was nearly as brief as they come, though. The former Georgia Tech standout finished one of the worst seasons (and the last) of his NBA career playing for the Celtics. His capabilities dropped considerably across most counting stats.
Marbury averaged 3.8 points and 3.3 assists in 23 regular-season games with the Celtics in 2008-09, compared to his career rates of 19.3 points and 7.6 assists per game. He played in 14 postseason games that season; Boston lost its second-round series to Orlando in seven games. The following season, Boston only offered the veteran's minimum to Marbury, which the veteran summarily dismissed.
Instead, the Coney Islander headed overseas to the Chinese Basketball Association (CBA), where he has had a long, successful career as a player and as a coach.
Historic milestones
It's also the date of a game legendary Boston point guard Bob Cousy dished out 28 assists in 1959, then an NBA record. It came in a game against the (then) Minneapolis Lakers (now, Los Angeles) in Boston's (and the NBA's) highest-scoring game in history, a 173-139 obliteration of the Lakers.
The Phoenix Suns matched the scoring record in 1990, and the assist record stood until Scott Skiles broke it with 30 assists in one game -- also in 1990.
Cardiff City made a £35.1m loss in the season they were relegated from the Championship, according to the club's latest set of accounts.
The Bluebirds are currently top of League One with the aim of returning to the second-tier at the first attempt.
But accounts state they remain reliant on the financial support of majority shareholder Vincent Tan, whose loans to the club totalled almost £90m by the end of last season.
In notes accompanying the accounts for the financial year end of 31 May 2025, Cardiff's overall liabilities stood at £161m.
As well as monies owed to parties connected to Tan, a sum of £37.3m is also owed to a company where chairman Mehmet Dalman has significant interest.
That saw Cardiff pay around £7m in interest and similar expenses, although more than half of Tan's loans do not accrue interest.
The accounts state that since the reporting period at the end of last season, Cardiff have also received a further £19.5m from that does not require repayment. The source of that £19.5m has not been made public.
Cardiff's turnover increased £2.6m to £25.8m, but their wage bill increased to £29.1m during the last campaign – although the accounts confirm most of the squad did include relegation clauses.
The £35.1m overall loss is a jump of £23m, although last year's finances were boosted by the sale of a percentage of any successful damages gained in their court action with French club Nantes over the death of the Argentinian striker Emiliano Sala.
Their operating loss remained relatively unchanged at £28.1m.
In the notes accompanying the accounts, the club state that relegation from the Championship meant they faced an "immediate challenge" of an "incredibly significant drop in turnover and the actions that by necessity had to be taken around the club's cost base to bridge that gap".
That has included pausing development of the club's proposed new training base until they return to the second tier, as well as utilising the club's academy talent as part of a squad restructuring.
That has proven successful so far with new manager Brian Barry-Murphy leading them to a healthy position at the top of League One.
Ten matches left. A four-point lead at the top of the Scottish Premiership. It is not a scenario many would have predicted 12 months ago for Hearts.
This time last year, Hearts were scrapping to secure a place in the top six – a battle they ultimately lost. The mood was frustration rather than fervour.
Yet football, particularly in Scotland, has a habit of shifting quickly when momentum takes hold. Now the landscape looks very different.
With each fixture, the pressure intensifies. A lead at the summit is both a privilege and a burden. But to their credit, Hearts' players and management have dealt with every test with calm assurance.
There has been no grandstanding, no emotional overreach – only a steady accumulation of points and belief.
That composure has contrasted sharply with events elsewhere.
Both Celtic and Rangers entered the campaign under familiar expectations. At those clubs, challenging for the title is not ambition – it is an obligation.
Yet too often this season, both have faltered. And with that has come fierce criticism from their own supporters.
Hearts, however, have been able to focus on themselves. There is freedom in being the disruptor. All they can do is continue collecting points, and with every win, the tension subtly migrates west along the M8.
That is not to say the path ahead is smooth. The injury list is lengthening at an awkward moment. Squad depth will be tested; resilience will be required.
But adversity can have its uses. Title races are rarely won solely by flair – they demand endurance.
Regardless of personnel against Aberdeen on Saturday, the task will be clear: stay focused, disciplined, and keep the points tally moving in the right direction.
With Celtic and Rangers meeting the following day, the timing is intriguing and an opportunity for Hearts to keep the pressure on.
Liverpool boss Arne Slot has been speaking to the media before Saturday's Premier League game against West Ham at Anfield (kick-off 15:00 GMT).
Here are the key lines from his news conference:
Jeremie Frimpong has trained "a few times this week" so is available to face West Ham.
Florian Wirtz remains sidelined with an injury which he described as "a disappointment for him and for us". On the timescale for his return, he added: "I don't know. Usually when I say that, I do know and I don't want to share that. But this time, I honestly don't know."
Slot said ending Mohamed Salah's goalless run is a "challenge he has" and "a team thing they have to improve" on.
More on Salah: "He sets his own standards and they were so, so high. When he doesn't score for a few games, it means people are surprised. We are used to Mo scoring a lot of goals, but we also know this has happened before and in the end, he always starts scoring again."
Slot added that Salah "is not our only attacker that's not scoring as much", as Hugo Ekitike and Cody Gakpo have also not scored as many recently.
On another win putting pressure on teams battling for the top four: "We're not so focused on other teams and mainly on ourselves. We know we need to win a lot of games and that is what our focus is on. We are aware of the league table."
He said Rio Ngumoha's playing time has improved massively over the past few weeks because he "developed and became a better player".
On facing another team near the bottom of the league after struggling to break down Nottingham Forest last weekend: "I cannot manipulate the fact we have struggled a lot against the teams who were promoted or near the bottom. We understand how difficult winning games in general is - it doesn't matter where they are in the table."
Rio Ngumoha has been jumping every hurdle put in front of him and is ready for Liverpool's starting line-up, says journalist and The Late Challenge podcast's Mo Stewart.
Liverpool host 18th-placed West Ham United on Saturday and Stewart believes there is no better time to call the youngster up.
"I'm very tempted," Stewart told BBC Radio Merseyside.
"If you looked at the whole season and was thinking 'I'm going to give this kid a start in a game', you'd expect it to be at home to a team in the bottom five. That's what's happening in this game and I think it might be the last time this season.
"On top of that, off the back of him making a real impact in the game against Nottingham Forest and helping to contribute to the win, it feels like a good time.
"I understand though why Arne Slot is so cautious with him. I do think that when you're a player of that talent and age - because he is still really young, he's 17 but a young 17, more 16 - you have to be careful with how he deals with the physical and the mental side of football.
"But with that being said, I am also of the opinion that every time they give him a little bit and how he's dealt with it, every time they have put a hurdle in front of him, he seems to jump it."
Fans of the Premier League's six wealthiest clubs are paying an average of £74 per ticket for each match they attend, while ticket revenues are soaring, according to data from a new report.
The Uefa European club finance and investment landscape report shows that Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool, Manchester City, Manchester United and Tottenham earned an average of 19% more money from selling tickets for home matches in 2025 than in 2024.
Among Premier League clubs, Arsenal made the most per fan, per match, earning an average of £89 per ticket.
The biggest increase in ticket income was earned by Liverpool, who made 27% more than the previous year, for a total of £120m.
The figures include matches in all European and domestic competitions and comprise the average price for general admission and hospitality tickets.
[BBC]
The data shows all 20 Premier League clubs made a combined total of £920m from ticket sales last year - an increase of £90m from the previous year.
That total is almost double the total of £514m in ticket income earned by Spanish clubs.
Nine Premier League clubs feature in Europe's top 25 for gate revenue, with the wealthiest six all in the top 11.
The report shows the 20 Premier League clubs are well ahead of their European rivals when it comes to overall revenue, earning a combined total of £6.5bn.
That is almost double the revenue of the next highest division, Germany's Bundesliga, whose 18 clubs made a total of £3.4bn.
Of the 25 clubs who generated the most revenue, 11 were English.
[BBC]
But those revenues did not mean the Premier League clubs turned a collective profit, as only five made a profit while 15 made losses and across the division, there was a combined pre-tax loss of £559m.
Chelsea - with £355m - made the second-highest loss in European football history while Spurs (£129m) were the the third-biggest losers in 2025, with Aston Villa fifth (£85m).
Brighton Captain Lewis Dunk, says his team aren't focusing on where they will finish the season, as they see out the campaign "game-by-game".
Brighton earned their first win of the month in their 2-0 victory over Brentford last week, and Dunk believes the team will be happy if they can keep that hunger going.
"I just want to see what we've seen in the last game," Dunk told BBC Radio Sussex.
"The fight in us, the clean sheet, the way we defended, the hunger in us. I think if we've got that in us, then I think we'll be more than happy where we finish.
"People talk about targets and where we want to finish and Europe and this and that, and yes you can say it, but I don't get why we would. When really, we have to go game-by-game and that's how I look at football.
"Everyone would love to finish in Europe, I thoroughly enjoyed the experience, but it's the Premier League and the Premier League is not easy. I'm not going to sit here and say we want to be in Europe again, we'll just see where we end up."
You can listen to Dunk discuss the Seagulls and darts by hitting play above or listen here on BBC Sounds
Wolves manager Rob Edwards and Sunderland counterpart Regis le Bris have condemned the racist abuse their players suffered last weekend.
Nigeria striker Tolu Arokodare, 25, received abusive messages on social media after he was part of a Wolves side beaten 1-0 at Crystal Palace on Sunday.
"[It's been a] really difficult week for him [Arokodare]," said Edwards. "He was upset and angered by it, understandably so.
"We have supported him, and we have had a few individual chats with him. We have spoken about it as a group to make sure we get around him and support him as well."
Sunderland's English winger Mundle, 22, was also targeted with online racist abuse following his substitute appearance in Sunday's 3-1 home defeat by Fulham.
"What happened to Romaine is unacceptable - we stand with him," said Le Bris.
"There is no room for racism or abuse in football or anywhere else. That's clear for us. We stand for respect, inclusion and diversity - these are the values of football and the values of the club."
Manchester United have confirmed sacking Ruben Amorim could end up costing the club almost £16m.
The Portuguese was dismissed on 5 January following his public attack on the club's hierarchy after a 1-1 draw at Leeds the previous day.
The figure was released in a filing to the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday, a day after the club confirmed they had made a profit of £32.6m in their second-quarter results to 31 December 2025.
Listed as an "event that occurred after the reporting period", United confirmed an amortised fee of £6.3m - which related to the cost of getting Amorim to Old Trafford from Sporting in November 2024 - had been written off and a "provision of £15.9m" would be made, representing the highest amount United could be liable to pay Amorim and his coaching staff.
It is not explicitly stated in the submission what would trigger the highest payment but sources with an understanding of the situation have said it relates to future employment.
Amorim is yet to speak publicly about his time at United and sources close to the 41-year-old have said there is no immediate likelihood of that changing.
The payment completes an expensive managerial experiment that ultimately ended badly.
United confirmed in a similar filing on 27 November 2024 they were paying Sporting £11m to hire Amorim to replace Erik ten Hag, whose exit was costing £10.4m.
It means the combined changes around Amorim could cost £37.3m.
His 14-month stint in charge was the shortest reign of a permanent manager at Old Trafford since David Moyes was sacked just eight months into his tenure in 2014.
Amorim won 25 of his 63 games in charge, finishing 15th in the Premier League, United's worst performance since they were relegated in 1973-74.
They also lost the Europa League final, meaning they have no European football this season for only the second time since 1990.
INDIANAPOLIS -- The moments surrounding his victory nearly 40 years ago are a blur for Timothy Wright. He remembers some of it, but mostly he remembers that feeling in his soul. Looking up and seeing his mom, dad, sisters, brothers, cousins and friends going crazy in the bleachers.
Standing on the mat in his home venue, the Vadalabene Center at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, which happened to host the Division II NCAA wrestling tournament that year.
Becoming a star in one of the most significant moments to play out in NCAA wrestling history, when at the 1987 Division II tournament, Wright became the first athlete in any sport at any college level to win four NCAA titles.
Wright was overjoyed and emotional, and all those years of wrestling came flooding back. The intense workouts and the emotional battles. The victories, all those victories (141-8-2) he'd fought for to get to this moment.
And in that blur, without thinking about it, after becoming the first four-time champion in NCAA history, Wright did a little dance. It was a few hip thrusts with a pump of his arms.
He turned to shake his opponent Roger Singleton's hand. Then, the official walked up and raised Wright's arm in victory. Wright took a couple steps, jumped into the air, pumping his fists.
When he landed, he thrust his hips a few more times before walking off the mat to the arms of his coaches and teammates.
The celebration wasn't planned. It was an off-the-cuff, emotion-induced reaction. If he had planned it, Wright says, it would have much been cooler than that. Instead, Wright describes what he did as a "smoother version" of the goofy move PeeWee Herman did in his kids' television show.
"Just something went over me and I just did it, just boom," Wright, 61, said. "I just kind of realized, man, you know, what I had just accomplished."
And with that dance, Wright believes his historic feat faded almost as soon as it happened.
Wright didn't really think about it at the time, how odd it was that not one reporter came up to interview him inside the Vadalabene Center after he had accomplished something that had never been done in the 81-year history of the NCAA.
He'd been interviewed by television announcers before the match. He thought they'd interview him after. They didn't.
"I was right there, you know, right there," Wright said. "Didn't even get an interview. Not even from my school. The first ever four-time NCAA champion in the history of wrestling."
Wright got a little love from his hometown newspaper in Rock Island, Ill., the next day with a front page story. But he didn't get what an athlete who had done what he had just done should have gotten. A search of newspaper archives from 1987 found few mentions of what Wright had accomplished.
But even more insulting, Wright says, was the "MVP snub" from that tournament. He didn't win the Outstanding Wrestler award. That went to Darryl Pope, who was a two-time NCAA champion with Cal State Bakersfield, who won the 1987 team title.
Wright had led his SIUE team to three straight titles in 1984, 1985 and 1986, and the team placed second in the 1987 tournament. Yet Wright had made the kind of history at that tournament in 1987 that rarely gets written in sports.
It's a puzzle to Al Sears, a teammate of Wright's at SIUE, who was at the match as an assistant coach. It's a puzzle why Wright didn't get the Outstanding Wrestler award in 1987. The dance Wright did was not even close to offensive in any way, Sears said.
"If you see what these guys do after a single catch in the NFL, what Timmy did was nothing," said Sears, who wrestled in the top weight class at 6-2 and 270 pounds. "What he did was so spectacular in the six minutes leading up to that moment, he should have been able to go out there stripped naked and run around the place and nobody should have said anything because what he did was so, so unbelievable."
At the time, Wright said he didn't think about not getting the MVP.
"But as time went on, I knew what it was all about. I ain't gonna lie and say I didn't know. It was some racist (crap)," Wright said. "But when you've been bull(crapped) half your life and just accept it is what it is, nothing you can do about it, you move on. I ain't mad at nobody. I ain't gonna go looking for somebody."
And so, 39 years ago, Wright tucked away that magical moment in his life and moved on.
'He got snubbed'
After graduating from SIUE, Wright worked forging steel for a few years. In 2000, he moved to Indy where he helped coach Cathedral and Warren Central to state titles. These days, Wright gets up in the wee hours of the morning to make his daily trek from Indy to St. Louis as a CDL driver.
Through the years, old teammates and friends have reached out to Wright still furious that he didn't get that Outstanding Wrestler award in 1987. Wright always responded. "Yeah, but what can we do about it?"
Unbeknownst to Wright, a few of his college teammates got together last year and wrote an email to SIUE Chancellor Dr. James T. Minor, pleading for "justice" for Wright, asking Minor to do something to give Wright the recognition he deserves.
"A great racial injustice occurred on the campus of SIUE in 1987 when upon becoming the first man to win four consecutive NCAA championships in NCAA history in any sport (DI, DII or DIII), the award for the Outstanding Wrestler was denied to him by men who sought any reason to disqualify him based on his color alone," the letter to Minor reads, in part.
"A less than five second celebratory dance at the end of his victory and accomplishment was enough to set the fire to racial prejudices by the coaches who voted for the Outstanding Wrestler award."
IndyStar reached out to Chancellor Minor through his assistant for comment on that letter and Wright's accomplishment. Minor did not respond.
Wright's teammates say the school should step up for "the little kid from Rock Island, Illinois, who helped change a whole lot of what we had going on at SIU Edwardsville," Sears said.
"He should not have been denied (that MVP) because what he'd done is just break NCAA history. He got snubbed there and I'm not sure what the exact circumstances were. He should really be praised for what he did there. He opened the door for lots of people."
When Wright learned his teammates had sent that letter to Minor, he was shocked and flattered. But he says he isn't expecting any recognition, not after all these years. He is just thankful that his story is finally being told.
No one worked harder than Wright
Wright's journey to wrestling came with a bit of pushback -- by him. He grew up in Rock Island, Ill., in a large middle class family. His father worked for International Harvester for more than 40 years. His mother worked for John Deere then at Community Hospital East when the family moved to Indy.
Sports were a big deal among the Wright kids, three boys and four girls. And Wright was one of those kids who played every sport and was really good at all of them. He particularly loved basketball.
But Wright was small, barely five feet tall in seventh grade, so when it came time to try out for the basketball team, Wright noticed the coach was paying a lot more attention to another point guard, a bigger kid. He was giving him more playing time in practice games, and Wright was not happy.
"It was like he already, coach's mind was set. And so one day I just said, pissed off, 'I'm going to wrestling practice,'" Wright said. "So, I walked into the wrestling room."
There was one sport Wright had never done in his life -- wrestling -- but he started doing pull-ups and pushups with the team, beating every single one of those wrestlers. Then, as the team started practicing, the coach noticed Wright was picking up the moves fast.
At the end of that practice, Wright said he was told to get on the mat with the team's star, who had gone 12-2 the year before.
"And I took him down.," Wright said. "Coach was like, 'OK, wait a minute. Go again.' I took him down again. Then he said, 'OK one more time.' I took him down again, three times in a row."
As Wright left that day, the coach told him what a great job he had done and asked him to come back to practice the next day. Wright told him, "Nah, I'm a basketball player." The coach said, "No, you're a wrestler."
Wright went back to basketball tryouts and, three days later, when the coach made his cuts, he was off the team. Wright later found out that the wrestling coach had talked to the basketball coach.
"So, he cut me. It was the best thing that ever happened to me," Wright said. "Looking back at it now, instead of me going out playing basketball, sitting on the bench, when I could have been in the wrestling room. So, God works in mysterious ways."
Wright was undefeated his seventh and eighth grade seasons and, by the time he was in high school, he was gaining national attention winning summer tournaments across the country, beating the state's elite and dominating at Rock Island as a two-time state champion who was named Illinois Outstanding Wrestler his senior season.
When SIUE coach Larry Kristoff caught wind of this 5-2 wrestling, 118-pound phenom, he wanted him on his team.
"All of a sudden, Timmy showed up, and he's on the wrestling team at SIU Edwardsville with us," said Sears, who was two years older than Wright and knew all about this star wrestler. Sears had grown up wrestling in Illinois and seen Wright at tournaments.
"The first time I ever laid eyes on him, I was like, 'Wow, that kid is special,'" Sears said. His admiration of Wright only grew as they were teammates at SIUE
"You know, he's a little guy. He's got a little stature, but he is a man amongst boys, even with guys my size, because of his attitude. It's amazing," Sears said. "He's just a tough guy who didn't put up with any (crap) with anybody, but he carried himself everywhere with the same championship demeanor that he did on the mat."
For Wright, college was a whole different level of wrestling than he'd seen before. Guys in the locker room who could make him better, guys at higher weight classes who could beat him. Wright went all in.
He showed up to run stairs before practice, and he stayed after practice to run more stairs. He lifted weights, jumped rope, did extra pushups, extra pull-ups -- and it paid off.
During his college career, Wright wrestled Division I schools -- Iowa, Iowa State, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Nebraska, Minnesota -- and beat them. At one match against Iowa, the top team in the country, just two SIUE wrestlers won. The 177-pounder and Wright.
By the time he was ready to wrestle the final match of his college career in 1987 for the national championship, Wright's SIUE team had won the past three Division II national titles and Wright was a household name in collegiate wrestling.
Before the match, coach Kristoff approached Wright: "You know if you win this, you will be the first wrestler to win four championships. First ever in the history of the NCAA."
'I didn't disrespect nobody'
Wright entered the 118-pound NCAA Division II championship match in 1987 with a 29-2-1 record. His opponent was Grand Valley's Singleton, 32-3.
"No one in the history of the NCAA has won four individual championships in any sport," television broadcasters said before the match. "The only thing standing between him and that awesome accomplishment is Roger Singleton."
The broadcast then showed the pre-game interview with Wright, asking him about his chance at making NCAA history.
"It's pretty exciting for me but, right now, I'm trying not to worry about it," Wright said. "Hopefully (I'll) go out and wrestle my style the way I've been doing all year. I think I can do it. I think I have a good shot at doing it."
And Wright did it, winning the match by an 11-7 decision.
But that dance he did afterward seemed to fuel something among the coaches who voted for the Outstanding Wrestler award for the tournament, says Wright and his teammates.
IndyStar reached out to the NCAA for comment on Wright's accomplishment and the MVP vote. It declined but suggested the National Wrestling Coaches Association, which handles the voting on Outstanding Wrestler for NCAA championship meets. The association did not respond.
Historically, Wright's post-match dance stood out in the 1980s, said Sears, a time when wrestlers celebrated more conservatively with hand raises, fist pumps, bows or hugs and high fives with coaches and teammates. Wright's victory performance was edgy, but not offensive, Sears says.
"He's doing his dance," the TV announcers said, laughing as Wright celebrated. "He has set a precedent here. He has set a precedent. ... Tim Wright does what no one has ever accomplished in the NCAA -- four individual national championships."
The relics of those memories from Wright's historic college career are dusty, hidden away much like his accomplishments have been through the years. There are dozens and dozens of medals and trophies and plaques.
But not that one -- the 1987 Outstanding Wrestler.
While Wright seemed the likely candidate for MVP given his historic performance, the winner Darryl Pope was on the championship team in 1987. He and Cal State-Bakersfield scored 90.5 points to SIUE's 69.5, and Pope became a two-time individual champion. IndyStar reached out to Pope, but did not get a response.
While some allege Wright's dance set off a racial controversy that impacted the MVP voting, three years before Wright's prolific run, John Davis became the first Black athlete to win the NCAA Division II Outstanding Wrestler. Davis was a two-time national champion (158 pounds) with the Morgan State Bears when he won in 1984.
Wright says that snub nearly 40 years ago still sometimes plays in his mind. Of all the awards he has, that 1987 MVP is the one he thinks he deserved the most.
"Had I been somebody else, it might have been a little different for them," said Wright. "The little dance I did afterwards, I don't think I did anything to discriminate against the guy I wrestled. I didn't disrespect nobody, I just did a little dance, you know, and they took that from me."
Last week, on a cold night in Glasgow, Celtic boss Martin O'Neill joined a very select club of managers who have been in charge for 1,000 professional games.
The League Managers Association (LMA) Hall of Fame 1,000 club is something I'm proud to be a member of too - there are only 40 of us, including Sir Alex Ferguson, Ron Atkinson, Jim Smith, Dave Bassett, Harry Redknapp, Graham Taylor, Brian Clough and Sam Allardyce.
It's getting harder to last that long, though. Far more managers are getting sacked, and more often, than there were when I started out, and for more than half of them, their first job is also their last.
According to the LMA, there have been 165 first-time managers since 1 January 2013, and to date 56% of them haven't got another manager's job.
In England now, the average time a manager is given at a club in the top four divisions of our men's game is one year and nine months, which is up from the end of the last season, when it was one year and four months, but is still crazy.
Gone are the days where you could get a job and think about building something - it seems to be more about survival now.
Longevity is highest in the Premier League, where the average time you get is more than two years, but it drops in the Football League - which is part of the reason why I'd definitely recommend that, given the opportunity, young coaches today should seriously look at jobs abroad, especially in Scandinavian countries for example, if they have the chance.
Martin, who turns 74 on Sunday, reached his milestone with Celtic, a club he adores, so it must have been something special.
I reached my 1,000th game with West Brom in 2016, and it came against my former club Stoke at the Britannia Stadium, as it was then. As I said at the time, you could not have scripted it better.
Like many managers of his generation who began lower down the pyramid, Martin started at the bottom of the ladder, in non-league.
It was looked on as good grounding and experience for managers who would go on to get jobs in our top division.
It was the same in Scotland too, where you would cut your teeth at smaller clubs before moving onwards and upwards - all of the names I mentioned earlier followed the same path, as did Bill Shankly and Howard Wilkinson. It was my route too, but so much is different today.
The advice I was given about how to stick around
West Brom captain Darren Fletcher presented Pulis with a Ship's Decanter at the club's training ground to commemorate his 1,000th match as a manager, the day before they played his old club Stoke. The game finished 1-1 [Getty Images]
My first chance as a manager came with Bournemouth in the summer of 1992. At first I was not thinking much beyond my first game - a draw on Preston's plastic pitch by the way - and neither, it seems, was my chairman, Norman Hayward.
I'd been given a club car, which was about 20 years old and, a few months into my first season, we went up to watch Grimsby play one night.
We drove there in his Mercedes and on the way back he dropped me off where I'd parked up. The windscreen was iced up so I turned on my engine and Norman got out his credit card to try to scrape the ice off.
While he was doing that, I heard him shouting: "Oh no, I can't believe it!" I thought he had snapped his credit card but he'd actually seen my tax disc. "They've given you 12 months. I told them six months!"
I laughed and said: "Thanks Norman, that gives me loads of confidence!"
Still, I was fortunate to get the chance at Bournemouth, and also lucky in that I received some good advice on how I might stick around.
I always remember the late Alec Stock - another member of the 1,000 club, who had long spells in charge of Leyton Orient, QPR and Fulham as well as with Yeovil, Roma, Luton and Bournemouth - ringing me up one night and explaining why I should work on a three-year plan.
The first season, he said, was to assess the players, staff, and get to grips with all the other aspects of how the club is run.
The second season was to reset it, to get it working on and off the pitch and win all the battles to get things my own way for the third season which, according to Alec, was the season that everyone - supporters, directors and yourself - should see progress.
He also told me any manager would only ever be judged a success by producing a winning team.
During my time at Bournemouth, I learned how true that was - never mind how hard you worked or how much you did to protect your club financially, management was all about winning.
The secret of longevity - learning how to win
O'Neill turns 74 on Sunday. In his 1,000th professional game as a manager, his Celtic side lost 4-1 at home to Stuttgart in the Europa League [PA Media]
At the end of my second season, a new chairman took over the club and I was on my way. So much for the three-year plan, but it was still a great two years of learning for me.
Norman was a hard chairman, but he was honest and we remain friends today. I was left more determined than ever to get back in the saddle and go again.
I was 34 when I got the Bournemouth job, which is very young for a manager but I learned the defining reason behind a long life in this new role - as Alec said, management is all about winning.
Irrespective of everything which surrounds the role - which has dramatically changed from my early days, by the way - if you don't win, then forget your philosophies because you won't be in a job for long.
Learning to win with different clubs and different players is a challenge but it was one I enjoyed.
Certain principles must be applied wherever you are and although your team's strengths can and do vary, those principles must stay rock solid.
Most young coaches today move on from academy football into professional football. Academy football is a teaching job, professional football is a winning job.
You only learn that when you get a professional job - but spaces are scarce for British managers in the Premier League, and they are dwindling in the Championship too.
Of the 44 clubs in England's top two divisions, there are only 21 British managers - 20 in permanent roles, plus Michael Carrick at Manchester United until the end of the season. That's the case even though our football associations deliver state-of-the-art coaching courses which are recognised as being as good, if not better, than in any other country worldwide.
Managers are seen more as coaches now
What's changed for British managers trying to get a job - or stay in one - is the rise of sporting directors, who have been appointed by mostly foreign owners.
As I've mentioned before in this column, both the Premier League and Championship also have enormous numbers of players from abroad and clubs know buying players from South America, Africa and Asia can be better value than the market at home.
So you have foreign owners and foreign directors of football - or even English directors of football working for foreign owners - who all see the value in appointing foreign coaches who have experience of working abroad, speaking different languages and understanding different cultures.
Because our top two leagues are so multicultural, the big agencies who have often provided assistance to the owners in buying the clubs and have helped guide their appointments too, have an almost direct line to the club's recruitment policies.
Recruitment is everything - if you can crack that side of things and bring good players to your club, then success will be forthcoming. Bournemouth, Brighton and Brentford have proved that.
My first season out of work after I'd been sacked by Bournemouth coincided with me being asked by Bruce Rioch to watch games for Bolton, who he was managing at the time.
That period taught me how important knowledge of players was because, after months spent travelling around the country, I was appointed Gillingham manager in 1995.
The knowledge I'd gained enabled me to bring in players that brought the club one of the most successful periods in its history.
Now, though, that side of things is taken care of by others. Managers are now more seen as coaches, expected to work with players recruited by the director of football, and sometimes without having any say in signings at all.
As I've mentioned above, there are certain teams whose recruitment has been fantastic, but there are also clubs who have experienced the complete opposite.
As a manager today, with players arriving from far-flung countries, it is impossible to watch all players live, yet I still would want and expect my club to have the decency to let me view the players they were advising we should sign.
Knowledge is vital for new managers
Wilfried Nancy was sacked by Celtic on 5 January after eight games in charge. His 33-day reign is the shortest in the club's history [Getty Images]
Over the past few months, we've seen young coaches arrive from Europe and the United States to take charge of Southampton, West Brom and Celtic.
Will Still, Eric Ramsay and Wilfried Nancy were all sacked pretty quickly. All three had no experience of British football - yet they were left alone to manage in difficult circumstances. It makes me wonder: Who at each club made that decision?
A lot of directors of football have never experienced management, and until you have actually sat in that hot-seat yourself, you don't realise how difficult it is, or the pressure you put yourself under to succeed.
Someone with any knowledge of the game, who had done the job themselves, would have provided those young managers with an experienced football man to help them through the initial period at their new club. So why didn't it happen?
Martin, who had been in interim charge at Celtic before Nancy was appointed, is a great example of someone who could have helped.
There should have been a recognition by the director of football that while Nancy came in with a really strong record in Major League Soccer, that competition is very different to British football.
There couldn't have been a better fit of someone to help him settle in than Martin, who was already there. He's got the manager's job there again now, of course, but why wasn't he kept on anyway as a mentor when Nancy arrived?
Why go abroad? For patience and time
Former Nottingham Forest, Leicester and Swansea manager Steve Cooper was named head coach of Danish club Brondby in September 2025 [Getty Images]
Young coaches are often appointed on the proviso that their role is to prepare the team to win games. Recruitment is dealt with by other staff, as are the medical and sports science elements, which will determine the availability of your best players through a long hard season.
So much of the machinery which provides either a successful or unsuccessful season could be dictated by everyone apart from the coach. Yet if the team are unsuccessful, he will invariably take responsibility and get sacked.
In most of my career, I took full responsibility for all of the above and accepted the end product of the sack if it didn't work.
With such a small window given to managers and coaches to succeed today, it is not surprising that Steve Cooper turned down opportunities to manage again in the Championship after leaving Leicester and chose to go to Brondby in Denmark instead.
He believes more patience and time will be provided there for him to be successful, which is something you just don't get in England any more.
Tony Pulis was speaking to BBC Sport's Chris Bevan.
WEST LAFAYETTE — Purdue basketball lost one game Thursday night, Braden Smith’s potential game-winning 3-pointer clanging off the back of the rim.
No. 13 Michigan State’s 76-74 victory, though, slots in along with a set of losses over the past three months. The No. 8 Boilermakers expected this season to be defined by what they accomplished when they shared the floor with the other best teams in the country.
Instead, the trend has unfolded in the other direction.
“We are where we are because we’re not playing to the best of our ability sometimes – I don’t think for a full 40,” Smith said. “We’ve got to get to that point where for a full 40 minutes we can be really good. And we’re not there yet.”
The runway to facilitate that takeoff gets a little shorter every game.
On Dec. 6, when Iowa State owned Mackey Arena for an afternoon, Purdue faced a long timeline for improvement. Its next game, Sunday at Ohio State, will be played in March. Three regular-season games remain, followed by the Big Ten tournament, followed by the last NCAA tournament the veteran senior starters will ever play.
The four home losses are the most since 2019-20. That team did not have NCAA tournament designs, let alone championship aspirations.
The three Big Ten home losses – and that fourth one, against the Cyclones – create a collective weight on the season. They obliterated any chance of Big Ten championship contention. They may deprive the Boilers a top-four Big Ten tournament seed – rewarded with a triple bye into the quarterfinals – for a second straight season. Those losses could push them a bit farther down the NCAA tournament seed line and, in theory, into more threatening matchups in every round.
The consequences, though, should be of less concern than the cause. None of the losses stemmed from a single cause, but all shared common denominators. Purdue tends to succeed, sometimes in key areas, but not succeed enough to win.
It happened again Thursday, in a somewhat surprising fashion.
Purdue exploited one of Michigan State's biggest strengths
Michigan State won Thursday. Purdue didn’t give a win away. The Spartans out-executed in myriad ways and deserved to win in West Lafayette for the first time since 2014 – a span of eight games.
“We couldn’t play much better,” Michigan State coach Tom Izzo said. He called it the program’s best road win “in a couple of years.”
No one had outrebounded his team this season. Not since a Sweet 16 victory over Mississippi last March had anyone done so.
The Spartans came in as the nation’s leader in defensive rebounding percentage. While offensive rebounding has at times been a weapon for Purdue, it was fair to expect a win to come via other methods.
Instead, the Boilermakers won on overall rebounds 27-25, including 8-6 on the offensive glass. That led to a 16-6 edge in second-chance points.
Purdue took an opponent’s chief strength and slapped them in the face with it.
Except Michigan State still won points in the paint 40-32. Carson Cooper thrived inside in the second half. Jeremy Fears Jr. could drive at the Boilers’ hedging centers to attack the basket. The Spartans shot nearly 60% from the field after halftime.
“Going into every game, we want to see what they’re great at,” Trey Kaufman-Renn said. “I thought we did our job rebounding.
“... The part we didn’t do was we didn’t keep the ball in front of us when they were in ball screens or off the dribble-drive. They got where they wanted and after that, it’s kind of hard.”
Losing the offensive boards contributed to the Illinois and Michigan losses. Winning them came up big in wins at Wisconsin and Nebraska. Coming off a 13-0 advantage over IU – allowing only a single offensive rebound for only the second time in program history – Thursday's performance on the boards should have been the difference-maker.
Instead, Michigan State prevailed by capitalizing even more against one of Purdue’s typical strengths.
Michigan State turned the tables on Purdue in 1 key area
The Boilermakers rank in the top 20 nationally in turnover rate. C.J. Cox and Gicarri Harris have turned the ball over three times apiece in Big Ten play. Oscar Cluff has only turned it over nine times.
Purdue had gone 16 straight games without being outscored in points off turnovers. Matt Painter’s nightly goal is eight turnovers or fewer. Against a top-10 defense Thursday, the Boilers only turned it over nine times.
And it felt like the Spartans scored at least two points on all of them. In reality, they only scored off seven, but the resulting 19-5 edge in points off turnovers decided this game.
While that typically indicates live-ball turnovers leading to fast breaks, that was not the case early. Michigan State forced a five-second call on a Purdue inbounds, then Fears converted a four-point play in halfcourt offense at the other end. Smith committed an offensive foul, and Kur Teng followed with a 3 at the other end. Smith threw one away, and after the under-four minute TV timeout, Jaxon Kohler knocked down a 3.
Those 10 first-half points explained why Purdue led only 39-36 at the break despite success in so many other areas.
The run-outs came in the second half, fueling MSU’s surge into the lead. Cooper picking off Smith’s pass and hitting Fears for a driving layup. Kohler stealing one from Kaufman-Renn and finding Teng for another 3 before the defense could reset. Teng grabbing Jack Benter’s errant pass and throwing up ahead to Coen Carr for an emphatic dunk.
That last one capped a spurt in which the Spartans flipped a one-point deficit to a six-point lead. Their last field goal off a turnover came with 10 minutes to play, but the damage had been done.
“If they’re 4 on 2, you’re up against it, or 5 on 3, you’re up against it,” Painter said. “But even 3 on 3 and Coen Carr’s in the equation, you’re up against it, because he’s not human.
“You throw that ball to him on the break like that and he’s there, you’re done. There’s nothing you can do.”
The conventional wisdom this season had been Purdue could have an off shooting night as long as it took care of the ball, or a sloppier night as long as it shot the lights out. Well, it made 12 of 25 from 3-point range, with five players making at least two apiece.
Again, against a top-10 defense which had held opponents to a paltry 30.8% clip behind the arc before Thursday.
Purdue did a lot of things very well and still could not win on its home court. The phenomenon becomes more puzzling when you consider all of the victories away from Mackey – holding on at Alabama, crushing Texas Tech in the Bahamas, avoiding a complete collapse and surviving at Nebraska.
Which set of results says more about what this Boilermakers team can accomplish in March? That will not remain an academic question much longer.
Business picked up on Thursday at the 2026 NFL combine in Indianapolis. After a few days of interviews and weigh-ins, we finally saw some action as the defensive linemen and linebackers participated in workouts and on-field drills.
Several of them put on a show, including a couple of prospects in play for the Washington Commanders with the No. 7 overall pick. The Commanders need plenty of defensive help at all three levels, with edge rusher being the most pressing need. You can't rule out a wide receiver or Notre Dame running back Jeremiyah Love either.
Outside of projected No. 1 overall pick, Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza, the top half of the 2026 NFL Draft could be as unpredictable as ever. So, the combine could be important for some players to separate themselves from the pack.
Here's a look at six players who shined on Day of the NFL combine.
Ohio State LB Sonny Styles
Sonny Styles profile...
6'5" ➡️ same as Calvin Johnson 244lbs ➡️ three pounds lighter than Derrick Henry 43.5" vert ➡️ same as Nate Robinson's max vert 4.46s forty ➡️ same as Bijan Robinson 135" broad jump ➡️ same as Julio Jones
Sonny Styles didn't need the NFL combine to show he was a first-round pick. It's all over his college tape. But when you add in his size, measurables and bloodlines, Styles is almost a perfect prospect. He arrived in Indianapolis as a surefire top-15 pick, but he may leave as a potential top-five pick.
Texas Tech EDGE David Bailey
David Bailey at the 2026 Combine…
▫️Faster than Antonio Cromartie ▫️Quicker than Davante Adams ▫️Jumps higher than A.J. Green ▫️More explosive than Adrian Peterson ▫️Heavier than Von Miller#NFLCombine2026pic.twitter.com/EIrK6YIhXH
While much of the talk centered around Styles, don't forget about Bailey. The All-American was a top-10 lock before Indianapolis, with a ceiling as high as No. 2 to the New York Jets. He did nothing to discourage the hype. Bailey's size, speed, explosiveness and short-area quickness match his tape. The Commanders already knew there was a good chance Bailey wouldn't make it to No. 7. It's doubtful now.
Ohio State EDGE/LB Arvell Reese
Sheeeeeesh.@OhioStateFB LB Arvell Reese with a 4.47u
Reese performed as expected. He and Styles were on another planet. However, they are different players. Reese played some at edge rusher and off-ball linebacker with the Buckeyes. He can do about everything, even though there are some questions about where to play him at the next level. It's really quite simple: don't box him into one spot. Reese is a top-five lock.
Florida DT Caleb Banks
.@GatorsFB DT Caleb Banks put on an unreal performance today:
Caleb Banks is a prospect who could use the combine as a way to shoot up draft boards. The talent is there. The size and athleticism are unreal. A foot injury cost him much of the 2025 season, so there were some who believed he could fall too early in the second round. That's not happening. Don't be shocked if Banks ends up going somewhere in the top 15-20 picks. Teams love to bet on upside. Banks has that and then some. He's also versatile enough to move around on the offensive line.
Texas Tech LB Jacob Rodriguez
Jacob Rodriguez reached a top speed of 18.43 mph during the Backpedal & React Drill, the fastest by any linebacker over the last four years.
Rodriguez traveled nearly a full mile per hour faster than the next-closest linebacker (Arvell Reese, 17.49 mph). pic.twitter.com/ELC3LQm1pQ
Despite a decorated college career that saw him win the Chuck Bednarik Award, Butkus Award, Lombardi Award and Bronko Nagurski Trophy, no one really discussed Rodriguez as a first or second-round pick. There were concerns about his size, and some questioned his athleticism. Rodriguez, who has elite tape at Texas Tech, put those concerns to rest on Thursday, leading the linebackers in the 20-yard shuttle and 3-cone drills, proving his explosiveness. Rodriguez will be drafted in the second round when all is said and done.
Kyle Louis was an excellent player at Pitt. However, size concerns had him pegged for the middle rounds. Louis showed his ability at the Senior Bowl last month. He was everywhere. NFL teams fell in love with him. On Thursday, he backed up what you see on the field with elite testing numbers. Louis is a player who probably would've struggled to make it 10-15 years ago just because of size. Now, he's a positionless weapon. He can play linebacker, safety, big nickel, etc. Defensive coordinators will want his speed on the field. For a team that wants to be "younger and faster," like the Commanders do, it's players like Louis who get coaches excited.
All three of Tegan Finn's first-team goals have come in the Vertu Trophy [Shutterstock]
Plymouth Argyle youngster Tegan Finn deserves to be in the first-team squad, according to boss Tom Cleverley.
The 17-year-old winger scored the Pilgrims' equaliser in their 2-1 Vertu Trophy quarter-final loss at Luton Town earlier this week - his first goal against first-team opposition.
Finn was included in Argyle's 22-man outfield squad for the rest of the season, despite him being a youth player.
Finn's goal came a few days after impressing for Argyle's youth side.
"The attitude he shows playing for the 18s on Saturday, scoring four goals for them, which catches the eye of everyone, which tells you he deserves this opportunity in the squad," Cleverley said.
"It results in a strong performance for the first team on Tuesday and a goal, an important goal it could have been.
"I love that about football clubs that you can be playing for our 18s on Saturday and score a cup quarter-final goal for the first team on Tuesday.
"He's deserved to be part of the plans in the first team, maybe more than he has been moving forward, but that's credit to the attacking players that have been playing - Owen Dale, Ronan Curtis, Xavier Amaechi on that side.
"So there's strong competition in that area of the pitch, but Tegan deserved his chance, and I thought he took it."
Liverpool's rich history is one littered with cautionary tales. The territory that comes with playing for a big club.
And yet, two careers in particular have been fresh in my mind this week, that of Michael Owen and that of Rhian Brewster.
Two forwards who played for the Reds during their teenage years, but with very different roles, yet two players who may feel they could have done more with their careers beyond their time at Anfield.
Owen is still publicly - and at any opportunity - proud to show the fact that he won the Ballon d'Or while at the club, yet you always sense a tinge of sadness that his career didn't last that little bit longer at an elite level. Instead, it burned bright and faded fast.
Brewster - some would argue, armed with the added benefit of hindsight - was never likely to reach that level. He certainly came from Chelsea hotly-tipped, though, and the fee he eventually left for symbolised that. Liverpool can rightly feel they got the better end of that deal now.
What if they had chosen to give him more minutes early on, though? If there were a proper development plan in place, meaning he wasn't simply left to be no more than a bench player? You can't help but feel that the lack of success in his career since could be in part due to a lack of top-level football during those years of such burgeoning talent.
For Owen, the opposite was certainly true. Some would argue that he was relied upon too frequently to be Liverpool's answer at such a young age and, despite the success he brought to Gerard Houllier's reign, that took a toll that was too great for his growing body.
It's these two career paths that make what Arne Slot does with Rio Ngumoha next a dilemma. It's clear that the youngster is ready for more minutes, but the club also needs to ensure it doesn't all come too soon for him.
Play him so much that you become reliant, and there's a chance that a growing body may not be able to take the strain, but wait too long to introduce him and potentially rob him of an early peak.
There's no one-size-fits-all solution to when a footballer's career peaks, even if we think we can generally attribute it to a specific age range.
Ramp his minutes up now, by all means, because he's more than deserving. But build him a proper ramp-up plan, so we can try to prolong the potential superstardom that stands before us.
Find more from Josh Sexton on outlets including The Anfield Wrap
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I keep hearing people say that, mathematically, Wolves still have a chance of staying up, but let me just tell them straight - there is no chance of that happening.
There is no doubt Wolves have improved under Rob Edwards, but this is still a game I'd expect Aston Villa to win.
Unai Emery's side have slipped up a few times in recent weeks, however, and it has cost them.
They have only won one of their past four league games and I am a bit gutted they haven't managed a couple more wins to really be in the title race.
Emery has always talked down their title hopes anyhow, and I understand why - he obviously doesn't truly believe they can do it - but until this blip in form they were in with a real shout.
I still think they will have too much for Wolves, but they are going to have to work hard for the points. Villa won 1-0 at Villa Park earlier in the season, so I am going for the same scoreline here.
Dominic Calvert-Lewin is the type of player who thrives under the spotlight, with no lights brighter than those at Elland Road for a Premier League night game.
Everton,West Ham, Chelsea, Crystal Palace and Nottingham Forest have all been beaten under the glare of the towering floodlights this season. It has always been a special place for a night game, from epic Champions League fixtures through to the modern day. There is no doubt the atmosphere created by the North and South Stands in particular impact those in white, and their opponents.
When I spoke to a very relaxed DCL and James Justin at the club's training ground this week, the mention of Elland Road under the lights brought a smile to both of their faces.
The former Everton man has scored four goals in those aforementioned games. Our conversation of course included an England angle, with the 28 year old admitting he is yet to receive a call from Thomas Tuchel, but his phone remains on.
Adding to his tally of 10 this weekend, against the second best defence in the division, would be some feat and would surely only increase the calls for international recognition.
It also wouldn't be the biggest shock if he did find the back of the net with it being a 5:30pm kick off and a fixture played under the intensity of those Elland Road lights.
City's players were given time off to have "a lot of caipirinhas and daiquiris" this week according to manager Pep Guardiola.
Bright lights and hangovers surely aren't the perfect mix!
The Washington Commanders made a shocking move on Thursday night, releasing starting center Tyler Biadasz. The 28-year-old center, who signed with Washington two years ago, started 31 games over the last two seasons for the Commanders. The offensive line is considered a strength for Washington, with Biadasz being a signficant reason why.
The move was surprising for multiple reasons. For one, Biadasz was reliable and solid. Secondly, he didn't give the Commanders significant salary-cap savings. While his cap hit for 2026 was among the top 10 in the NFL, Washington didn't need the cap space by moving on from him. It also creates another hole.
Now that Biadasz is gone, who will the Commanders replace him with? Less than two weeks before free agency begins, you'd like to think Washington has a plan.
Here are six candidates who could be the Commanders' center in 2026.
Commanders G/C Nick Allegretti
There has been talk of Allegretti being a potential salary cap casualty. Now, he's a contender to start at center. Allegretti has played all three interior spots and has also played some center for Washington when Biadasz was out. He struggled with his snaps at times. But remember, the Commanders plan on being under center a lot more in 2026, so that shouldn't be an issue. It can be argued whether Allegretti is an actual upgrade over Biadasz. However, he's under contract, and Washington likes him. Don't rule it out.
Ravens C Tyler Linderbaum
Linderbaum is one of the jewels of the free-agent class. Unbelievably, the Ravens didn't pick up his fifth-year option, and now he's close to hitting the market. Baltimore wants to retain him and has made an effort to do so. He will have plenty of options. He could land with the Giants, where his former coach, John Harbaugh, is. Or, he could land in Los Angeles with the Chargers and Jim Harbaugh. It's doubtful the Commanders would pay the premium for Linderbaum with so many other needs. If they did, this offensive line goes from a solid top-10 unit to among the NFL's best. Linderbaum is an elite center.
Browns C Ethan Pocic
Pocic is a nine-year veteran, having started 97 career games. He's not elite, but he's solid and reliable. Is he an actual upgrade over Biadasz? He could be cheaper, though. Pocic has spent the past four seasons with the Browns, and he will start somewhere in 2026.
Panthers C Cade Mays
While Linderbaum gets the headlines, Mays is a name to watch. The 26-year-old has the size (6-foot-6, 325) to handle some of the bigger defensive tackles in the division, such as Jordan Davis, Jalen Carter, Dexter Lawrence and Quinnen Williams. Initially drafted by the Panthers in 2022, Mays was waived during final cuts in 2024. The Giants signed him to their practice squad, and the Panthers later re-signed him back off New York's practice squad. In 2025, he took over at center for Austin Corbett, and his career took off. Mays is hitting free agency at the right time and will also have options.
Bills C Connor McGovern
McGovern is a solid center who will also have a strong market. Again, he's probably more in line with Biadasz, but maybe slightly better. However, he'll probably earn a decent salary on the open market. McGovern may be too pricey for the Bills once he hits free agency. Don't expect the Commanders to get into a bidding war for any offensive linemen this year, so McGovern seems unlikely. If Washington chose to pay significant money for a center, it would be Linderbaum.
Former Titans C Lloyd Cushenberry
The Titans signed Cushenberry the same year as the Commanders signed Biadasz. Biadasz's time in Washington was much more impactful than Cushenberry's in Tennessee, though. A third-round pick of the Broncos in 2020, Cushenberry started at center for Denver for four seasons before landing with the Titans. Injuries ruined Cushenberry's Tennessee tenure, and he was released earlier this week — or will be released before the new league year. Whoever signs Cushenberry could land a bargain. He's still only 28 years old.
Fullenkamp is a 27-year teacher and coach in the Brookville Local School District.
“As the architect of the Blue Devils’ defense, he helped lead the program to six consecutive OHSAA playoff appearances,” the school district said. “As we turn the page to the next chapter of Brookville football, we’re confident that Coach Fullenkamp’s vision, standards, and commitment to excellence will elevate the next generation of student-athletes.”
Fullenkamp played for legendary coach Bob Gregg at Centerville High School.
He also earned All-American honors as the team captain at the University of Dayton, playing for College Football Hall of Fame coach Mike Kelly.
The Blue Devils went 10-2 last season before losing to CHCA in the second round of the high school football playoffs.
Luke McCowan believes no-one in Scotland can stop Celtic if they can hit top form. (Sun)
Goalkeeper Viljamo Sinisalo's performance in Celtic's 1-0 win away to Stuttgart, with the German side winning the Europa League tie 4-2 on aggregate, has given manager Martin O'Neill food for thought. (Herald - subscription required)
O'Neill says the direction of Scotland's co-efficient is "not fantastic news". (Glasgow Times)
Motherwell manager Jens Berthel Askou says speculation linking him with Celtic is "something that we cannot stop". (Sun)
Dundee United manager Jim Goodwin believes it would be rude to dismiss Saturday's opponents Motherwell's Scottish Premiership title hopes. (Courier - subscription required)
A starting jersey is Gavin Molloy's to use after the defender returned to the Aberdeen side in Tuesday's 0-0 draw with Dundee United, says interim boss Peter Leven. (Press and Journal - subscription required)
Hibernian midfielder Josh Mulligan faces a delay in his recovery from minor ankle surgery but Chris Cadden and Joe Newell are making progress in training. (Edinburgh Evening News - subscription required)
Hearts manager Derek McInnes believes getting players back fully fit in the spring will feel like a transfer window. (Scotsman - subscription required)
McInnes insists the Scottish Premiership leaders' warm weather training to Dubai is not "a jolly". (Record - subscription required)
Estoril had just lost 3-1 to Sporting at Alvalade, but Ian Cathro was in an incredibly positive mood in his post-match news conference.
"Can I put a question to you?" he asked a journalist in native-level Portuguese the last time the team from the Lisbon coast faced Sporting away, in March 2025.
"What type of football do you like to watch? Did you enjoy the game? Probably you were all around here in other matches and I assume you fell asleep [at some point]. We want to do things differently."
That night, despite the result, at times Estoril, who play in a 5,000-capacity stadium, managed to silence more than 35,000 home fans.
Cathro couldn't have been prouder to witness it.
On Friday, the 39-year-old Scottish coach will be heading back to Alvalade hoping to achieve the same, albeit with a better outcome on the pitch.
His Estoril side are one of the most exciting teams to watch in Portugal, averaging two goals per game with 46 in 23 matches, the fourth most, and more than league leaders FC Porto (44).
Along with Sporting, they've had the most games scoring four or more this campaign (six). For the second consecutive season, a team used to fighting relegation finds itself comfortably in the top half of the table, albeit with the most porous defence, having conceded 39 goals.
The club's record top-flight points tally of 54, achieved in the 2013-14 season, when they recorded their best finish of fourth, is perhaps out of reach this term given they are on 33 with 11 games remaining, but even Benfica boss Jose Mourinho admitted being impressed by Cathro, saying "he's leaving his mark".
The Scotsman's secret? As he always emphasises, they play with no fear, regardless of the opponent.
"I'm young, but I've already been through a lot, in a lot of places. I think I've already seen almost every film you can see in a career in this industry," Cathro tells BBC Sport.
"I'm not here trying to win five games in a row just to make the jump. I look at this project and I genuinely feel my responsibility is to help the club take a step to another level. And that other level is more stability, so that no one - absolutely no-one - is afraid anymore."
The recognition for that is certainly coming.
In January, Cathro was voted the Portuguese top flight's coach of the month by his peers.
'I'm not here to perform miracles, but bring more stability'
The Dundee-born manager has had previous experience in Portugal, as an assistant to Nuno Espirito Santo at Rio Ave from 2012 to 2014. Cathro then followed Nuno to Wolves, Tottenham Hotspur, Valencia and Saudi Arabian side Al-Ittihad.
But he has now found a home away from home in Estoril and has changed the mentality of the club.
Such is Cathro's impact that, in an unusual move last summer, the club extended his contract until 2028, following his appointment in July 2024.
If he fulfils it, he will become their second longest-serving coach, behind only former Portugal manager Fernando Santos.
Cathro feels he has done enough to change perceptions around him back home to no longer be referred to as the "ex-Hearts coach" - he was dismissed after seven months following a shock Scottish League Cup group-stage exit in 2017 in his only other managerial post.
"I know there will be far less visibility for everything I do here compared with a club in Scotland, if we're talking about the United Kingdom," says Cathro, who was also an assistant manager to Steve McClaren and then Rafael Benitez at Newcastle.
"But knowing that everything we do in life matters and is relevant, it's true that I spent seven months as Hearts' head coach and what happened, happened. If we're going to go into the details of that, we'd need another two or three hours, and it's not really worth it.
"But any doubts that might have existed after that short spell, if someone looks at everything that's been done and what's being built here, I think those seven months are already in the past.
"And I look at this job at Estoril as my first one. Because here I've had normal working conditions, and that's why I refer to Estoril as my first team. I want to be a positive figure in the club's history, someone who helped. I'm not here to perform miracles, but to bring more stability."
'I feel a thousand times more Portuguese than Scottish'
Cathro doesn't hold back when speaking and that's something that has made his Estoril news conferences a must-watch.
He has not always been like this in the past and it's something he regrets.
So whenever he sees something wrong nowadays, he brings it up - whether it's the league calendar, the local time-wasting culture or the ball-boy system.
"I don't have any problem saying what I feel, knowing that sometimes I'll say the right thing, sometimes I'll say the wrong thing. I'm not going to hide from something I think is important," he explains.
That straightforward approach is very Portuguese.
It's no coincidence to find references to him in the local media of being "the most Portuguese Scot there is", "a Scot who could have been born in Estoril" and "a Portuguese soul".
"This is something that makes me very proud. I've said several times that my life changed completely when I went to Rio Ave," says Cathro.
"I learned - and I became a man - in that Portuguese context. I'm absolutely certain that, in footballing terms, I feel a thousand times more Portuguese than Scottish.
"What I like most is the fact that time moves a little more slowly here. I live at a completely different rhythm here with my family than I did in Scotland, for example. We're able to make more memories and more meaningful moments as a family."
Estoril sporting director Helena Costa recently told Record that she believes Cathro "will make the step to a big club".
For now, though, he prefers to live in the moment.
"I think I've got far more experience than I've got years of life. And because of that, I don't waste much time on anything that isn't exactly what I have to do today," adds Cathro.
"I know tomorrow isn't 100% under my control, and I don't want to live in the past or in the future either. I've got a big responsibility to help the players and help the club, and I'm not going to do anything that could complicate that."
TKO: “The Kilcoyne Opinion” discusses the loaded 2026 Cardinals Hall of Fame nominees. Albert Pujols, Yadier Molina, Brian Jordan and George Hendrick. TKO is anxious to see both Pujols and Molina enter the Cardinals Hall of Fame the way they should, together!
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The Lady Red Devils beat Miami Valley League (MVL) rival Butler High School, 49-32, on Wednesday in the Division III District Semifinal at Springfield High School
“Since the program began in 1970, multiple generations of players and coaches have built something truly special, and last night, the Lady Red Devils became just the third school in Ohio history to reach this remarkable achievement,” the school district said.
Tippecanoe improved to 22-2 overall and advanced to the district final on Saturday.
They will play Western Brown at Lakota High School at 3 p.m.
Ireland and England faced each other in the Pro League in December [Getty Images]
The FIH Hockey World Cup qualifiers mark the final stage of the journey to the 2026 Hockey World Cup which will be jointly hosted by Belgium and the Netherlands from 15-30 August.
Nine men's and women's teams have already qualified either from winning their respective continental championship in 2025 or through the FIH Pro League, with the Netherlands and Belgium qualifying as hosts.
That leaves seven places. There will be two qualifying tournaments for men and women with eight countries in each divided into two pools of four based on their world ranking.
The top three teams from each tournament automatically qualify.
Additionally, the highest world-ranked fourth-placed team across the events also earns a coveted World Cup berth.
Men’s and women’s teams from Ireland, England, Scotland and Wales will be involved.
Who will the home nations face?
City of Santiago, Chile (1-8 March 2026)
Women's competition
Pool A: Australia, Chile, France, Switzerland
Pool B: Japan, Ireland, Canada, Malaysia
Men's competition
Pool A: Chile, France, Wales, Scotland
Pool B: Canada, Ireland, Korea, Poland
Ismailia, Egypt (1-7 March 2026)
Men's Pool A: Egypt, England, Japan, USA
Men's Pool B: Austria, China, Malaysia, Pakistan
Hyderabad, Telangana, India (8-14 March 2026)
Women's Pool A: Austria, England, Italy, Korea
Women's Pool B: India, Scotland, Uruguay, Wales
What are the chances of qualification?
With three places up for grabs in each tournament, qualification should be reasonably straightforward for England's men, who have moved up to fourth in the world rankings after recent impressive performances in the FIH Pro League.
Malaysia are the next highest ranked team in 13th.
The other men's tournament in Chile, however, could be a real fight for the three places. France, ranked ninth in the world, and Ireland in 11th will be favourites but Wales (15), Korea (16), Canada (19) and Scotland (20) are all capable of upsetting anyone on their day.
Wales qualified for the last World Cup at the expense of Ireland and will be looking to make it again while Scotland have never qualified but are capable of making history.
In the women’s tournament in Chile 2018 World Cup silver medallists Ireland will fancy their chances of qualifying for the third time in a row.
Although they are the third-ranked team behind Australia and Japan, their recent 4-1 win over the Aussies in the Pro League will have been a huge confidence booster.
Australia, surprisingly, find themselves in the qualification tournament after losing the Oceania Cup to New Zealand, but they should not have too many issues navigating their way to the finals but hosts Chile are the dark horses and could upset any of the three nations above them in the world rankings.
India are the favourites to win the other women’s tournament with home advantage although England are ranked one place above them in the current world rankings and the highest placed team of the eight competing.
Italy and Korea will be competitive but Scotland have a huge opportunity here to make their first World Cup Finals for twenty years.
They are the third ranked team in the tournament while Wales will have to pull off some upsets if they are to qualify for the World Cup for the first time since 1983.
Airports are not just travel hubs—they are the beginning and end of a traveller’s journey. A smooth, stress-free airport experience can set the tone for a positive travel adventure. On the other hand, long queues, confusing signage, or delayed services can quickly turn a trip into a frustrating experience.
In the highly competitive world of global air travel, some airports are shining brighter than others. The 2025 Airport Service Quality (ASQ) Customer Experience Awards by Airports Council International (ACI) World spotlight those airports that excel at delivering superior customer experiences. Based on real-time feedback from passengers, these awards rank airports on their ability to provide an outstanding experience across various touchpoints—be it check-ins, security procedures, facilities, or staff interactions.
This year, Spain, Italy, Denmark, Austria, Switzerland, Finland, and several other European countries have emerged as the leaders in offering exceptional airport experiences. In this article, we will take you through the top airports in Europe as recognised by the 2025 ASQ Awards, exploring how each country and its airports have managed to achieve such remarkable customer satisfaction.
Let’s dive in and find out why Spain, Italy, Denmark, Austria, Switzerland, Finland, and other countries are winning the battle for the best airport experiences in Europe!
Spain’s Dominance in the ASQ Rankings: Madrid‑Barajas and Gran Canaria Shine
When it comes to airport service quality, Spain takes the lead, with two of its major airports — Adolfo Suárez Madrid‑Barajas Airport and Gran Canaria Airport — receiving top recognition for their exceptional customer service.
Adolfo Suárez Madrid‑Barajas Airport: Spain’s Flagship of Excellence
As the busiest airport in Spain, Madrid‑Barajas is a central hub that connects Europe to destinations across the globe. The airport is consistently ranked among Europe’s best for passenger satisfaction, excelling in areas such as cleanliness, security processing speed, and staff professionalism.
Key Highlights:
Efficient Check-ins: The airport has invested in cutting-edge self-check-in kiosks and a robust online check-in system, significantly reducing waiting times for passengers.
Seamless Security: With a strong focus on passenger security, Madrid‑Barajas has streamlined the security process while maintaining high standards of safety, making the entire procedure faster and more efficient.
Shopping and Dining: The airport’s wide range of duty-free stores and local dining options provide travellers with a variety of choices while they wait for their flights, enhancing the overall experience.
Table: Madrid‑Barajas Airport Performance
Service Area
Rating
Key Features
Check-in Efficiency
4.8/5
Fast, automated check-in kiosks, efficient staff
Security Procedures
4.7/5
Quick and streamlined security checks
Facilities & Amenities
4.6/5
Great shopping, diverse dining options
Gran Canaria Airport: Spain’s Hidden Gem
Despite being a smaller airport compared to Madrid, Gran Canaria Airport punches above its weight. Located in the Canary Islands, this airport is the main gateway for tourists heading to the Spanish islands, known for its efficient security checks and tourist-friendly atmosphere.
Key Highlights:
Tourist‑Friendly: The airport offers multilingual staff and helpful tourist information desks, ensuring international visitors feel at ease.
Modern Facilities: Passengers enjoy comfortable waiting areas, high-speed Wi-Fi, and easy access to amenities, all contributing to an excellent experience.
Table: Gran Canaria Airport Performance
Service Area
Rating
Key Features
Efficiency
4.6/5
Friendly staff, smooth transitions
Passenger Comfort
4.7/5
Comfortable seating, ample lounge space
Italy’s Pride: Rome Fiumicino Airport Leading the Charge
Italy’s Rome Fiumicino Airport continues to set the standard for passenger satisfaction, remaining one of the busiest and most renowned airports in Europe. It serves as the main international gateway to Italy and is consistently recognised for its superior service.
Rome Fiumicino Airport: A Seamless Experience
With more than 40 million passengers passing through its terminals every year, Rome Fiumicino ensures that each traveller’s journey is as efficient and enjoyable as possible.
Key Highlights:
Check-in Services: Automated kiosks and a highly efficient check-in system ensure that passengers can quickly process their paperwork and head to their gates.
Lounge & Amenities: The airport offers a wide range of luxurious lounges, including the Leonardo da Vinci Lounge, where travellers can enjoy a peaceful and comfortable environment.
Passenger Convenience: Free Wi-Fi and helpful staff throughout the airport help to create a welcoming atmosphere for international passengers.
Table: Rome Fiumicino Airport Performance
Service Area
Rating
Key Features
Check-in Efficiency
4.9/5
Automated kiosks, quick processing times
Passenger Comfort
4.8/5
Premium lounges, excellent seating areas
Denmark and Austria Lead the Way for Medium‑Sized Hubs
While large airports dominate the rankings, Denmark’s Copenhagen and Austria’s Vienna airports demonstrate that medium‑sized hubs can also provide world-class service.
Copenhagen Airport: Efficiency at Its Best
Copenhagen Airport is a popular hub for passengers travelling between Scandinavia and the rest of Europe. Known for its efficient security, clear signage, and modern amenities, the airport provides a hassle-free experience for both business and leisure travellers.
Key Highlights:
Easy Navigation: Passengers consistently praise the airport for its clear signage and easy-to-follow paths, which make it quick to get through the terminals.
Fast Security: Copenhagen boasts one of the fastest security check processes in Europe, with minimal waiting time for passengers.
Table: Copenhagen Airport Performance
Service Area
Rating
Key Features
Check-in & Security
4.7/5
Fast, efficient procedures
Amenities
4.6/5
Excellent food, ample seating and Wi-Fi access
Vienna Airport: A Model of Customer Satisfaction
Vienna International Airport continues to win praise for its cleanliness, excellent customer service, and smooth transit experiences. It is an ideal gateway for passengers heading to Central Europe and remains a standout in passenger feedback.
Key Highlights:
Cleanliness: The airport is often recognised for its immaculate facilities, including restrooms, lounges, and terminal spaces.
Staff Friendliness: Vienna Airport employees are noted for their helpful and friendly demeanor, providing a welcoming environment.
Table: Vienna Airport Performance
Service Area
Rating
Key Features
Cleanliness
4.8/5
Excellent cleanliness standards
Customer Service
4.7/5
Friendly, approachable staff
Switzerland and Finland: Precision in Service
Switzerland’s Zurich Airport and Finland’s Helsinki Airport are exemplars of precision, efficiency, and high standards.
Zurich Airport: Smooth and Seamless
Zurich Airport stands out for its on-time performance, easy transfers, and high-quality amenities. It’s the gateway for both business and leisure travellers heading to Switzerland and beyond.
Key Highlights:
Passenger Assistance: Zurich provides real-time flight information, allowing passengers to stay informed and stress-free.
On-Time Performance: Known for its excellent punctuality and fast transfers, Zurich ensures that travellers enjoy a seamless journey.
Helsinki Airport: Nordic Excellence
Helsinki Airport is an efficient hub with world-class customer service and state-of-the-art facilities. It is especially known for its easy connections to Asia and Northern Europe.
Key Highlights:
Modern Amenities: From spa services to relaxation zones, Helsinki provides passengers with opportunities to relax before flights.
Technological Integration: Helsinki continues to introduce innovative technologies like automated check-ins and smart baggage systems, making the travel experience smoother for passengers.
Table: Zurich and Helsinki Airports Performance
Airport
Country
Rating
Key Features
Zurich Airport
Switzerland
4.8/5
High punctuality, easy transfers
Helsinki Airport
Finland
4.7/5
Modern facilities, automated systems
UK’s Smaller Airports: Newcastle and Belfast Lead the Way
Newcastle International Airport and Belfast City Airport in the UK are shining examples of how smaller airports can excel in customer experience.
Newcastle International Airport: Small But Mighty
Newcastle Airport continues to impress passengers with its fast check-ins, easy connections, and welcoming atmosphere. Despite its size, it offers the same level of customer care as larger airports.
Belfast City Airport: Efficiency and Comfort
Belfast City Airport is known for its quick security checks, comfortable lounges, and its proximity to Belfast’s city centre. It’s an excellent choice for both domestic and international travellers.
Table: UK’s Smaller Airports Performance
Airport
Country
Rating
Key Features
Newcastle International
United Kingdom
4.6/5
Efficient check-ins, quick access
Belfast City Airport
United Kingdom
4.7/5
Friendly staff, fast security
Rising Stars: The New Contenders from Georgia, Estonia, Latvia, and Malta
In addition to the larger and medium-sized airports, smaller regional hubs in Georgia, Estonia, Latvia, and Malta are increasingly making their mark.
Tbilisi International Airport (Georgia)
Known for its modern terminal facilities, Tbilisi has been praised for its efficient security measures and pleasant passenger experience.
Tallinn Airport (Estonia)
Tallinn impresses with its efficient customs processing, clear signage, and well-maintained amenities.
Riga Airport (Latvia)
Riga is noted for its cleanliness, clear instructions, and prompt baggage handling.
Malta International Airport
Malta continues to be a favourite for its hassle-free check-in process and clear terminal signs.
Why These Awards Matter: The Importance of Customer Experience in Air Travel
The ACI ASQ Awards are crucial in helping airports benchmark and continuously improve their services. These awards show that passenger experience is not a luxury—it’s a necessity for ensuring the long-term success of airports and airlines alike. By recognising the top performers, the ACI ASQ Awards highlight the best practices and encourage other airports to elevate their customer service standards.
Conclusion: Europe’s Airports Set the Standard for Excellence
The 2025 ACI ASQ Awards have revealed that Spain, Italy, Denmark, Austria, Switzerland, Finland, the UK, and other European countries are leading the way when it comes to airport customer service. Whether it’s Madrid, Rome, Zurich, or Prague, these airports have proven that exceptional customer experience is key to keeping passengers satisfied and loyal.
As air travel continues to grow, these airports will serve as models for how to create seamless, efficient, and enjoyable experiences for travellers around the world.
Michigan State basketball defeated Purdue on Thursday night, 76-74, ending a 14-year losing drought inside of Mackey Arena. It was a massive win for the Spartans, especially heading into March, earning a big win.
Despite not having his best performance, finishing with eight points, three rebounds and three assists, Jaxon Kohler was still a massive piece in the Spartans win on Thursday night.
Following the game, the senior forward spoke to the media on what it took to beat Purdue, what it means for March and what kind of team MSU is despite having a poor performance against Ohio State on Sunday.
After Jeremy, we have Jaxon's turn. Hear the Kohler Bear's thoughts on tonight's game. https://t.co/cGxePxjovd
Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan State news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Cory Linsner on X @Rex_Linzy
Minnesota Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards wasn't afraid to put Thursday's game in his own hands ... and wasn't afraid to let everyone know about it, including Minnesota head coach Chris Finch.
Edwards made a huge shot to give the Timberwolves a 92-88 lead over the Los Angeles Clippers with 42.9 seconds left in the fourth quarter, before getting in Finch's face.
"That's what I do," Edwards could be seen telling Finch on the broadcast after the shot.
The Timberwolves went on to win 94-88 and Edwards was asked about that moment during his postgame interview with Amazon Prime.
“The play before, when I took the midrange over two (players), (Finch) said to pass the ball and I told him, 'You don't want me to pass the ball, you want me to shoot it,'" Edwards said.
Edwards had 31 points, five assists and three rebounds for the Timberwolves. He shot 12-of-24 from the field, including 2-for-6 from the 3-point line.
Phil Parkinson is relishing the prospect of facing his former club Charlton Athletic once again as Wrexham bid to maintain their impressive away run.
The Red Dragons are unbeaten in their past five Championship matches on the road and have claimed more points (26) than any other team in the division since Christmas.
"We've always had competitive games with Charlton over the last couple of years, both home and away," said Parkinson.
"It's a great stadium, especially when there's 20,000 plus in there.
"We went down there in the league last year and it was a great atmosphere and it's going to be a really good game."
Having won the reverse fixture 1-0 at Stok Cae Ras in November courtesy of a late Josh Windass penalty, Parkinson's men have the opportunity to claim a first league double of the season when they face Nathan Jones' men at The Valley on Saturday (15:00 GMT).
"They had a dip after a very strong start and they've picked up again recently," Parkinson said of the Addicks.
"Like all of Nathan's teams, they're very hard-working, very organised and are showing all of the qualities you need to be a Championship team."
Wrexham beat Charlton Athletic 3-0 in April 2025 to secure a third successive promotion [Getty Images]
The Red Dragons secured a famous 3-0 win over Jones' side to seal automatic promotion from League One in April last year.
And ahead of the meeting between the sides in the English capital this weekend, Parkinson stated he is hoping to create similar memories during his time as Wrexham manager.
"It's one of the most incredible days in my memory as a player or as a manager," said Parkinson.
"Just everything about that day was incredible in terms of the game in the lunchtime kick-off, the atmosphere in the ground, the celebrations after, we'll never forget that day."
He added: "The drama, the tension, the performance of the group - when it mattered most, we put in one of our best performances of the season.
"We can enjoy those memories, but this season it's now seeing if we can we create some more."
But in the 25 games prior to the break, Wood had just one goal and four assists. The 21-year-old rookie, who started the season with 10 points in his first 11 games, had cooled off significantly. He was even sent back to Milwaukee and the AHL, playing three games for the Admirals while the rest of the team was either in Italy or took time off.
The work paid off, apparently. Wood scored the game-tying goal in the third period for Nashville (27-24-7, 61 points), setting up an eventual 4-2 win over their division rivals at Bridgestone Arena.
"A huge goal by (Wood) on the power play," coach Andrew Brunette said. "To me, that was the biggest goal of the game. That power play didn't look great and he was able to capitalize on the one really good chance. A heck of a shot."
The goal, scored with Nashville down 2-1 in the third period, came on the Predators' first power play of the game. The top unit wasn't able to generate any quality chances, but then, with the second unit on the ice, a loose puck came to Wood in the slot. Using all of his 6-foot-4 frame to gather the puck, he wired a wrist shot by goaltender Spencer Knight's shoulder to tie the game.
"It was a great feeling," Wood said. "It's nice to come back from the break and get off on the right foot."
Wood's tying goal set up Ryan O'Reilly's go-ahead goal with 3:16 left. An empty net goal by Steven Stamkos made it a 4-2 final for the Predators, who are now within two points of the final wild card for the NHL playoffs.
Though the goal should give Wood a confidence boost, his approach is moderation.
"Confidence can be tough if it only comes from goals," Wood said. "You've got to try and find other ways to build that."
Alex Daugherty is the Predators beat writer for The Tennessean. Contact Alex at jdaugherty@gannett.com. Follow Alex on X, the platform formerly called Twitter, @alexdaugherty1. Also check out our Predators exclusive Instagram page @tennessean_preds.
The Chargers have been linked to Colts wide receiver Alec Pierce by NFL Network's Manti Te'o.
Te'o believes Pierce, alongside Ladd McConkey, could give the Bolts a duo similar to Davante Adams and Puka Nacua on the Rams.
"If Alec Pierce were to go to a place like the Chargers, it's going to be dangerous. You talk about somebody who's fast, who's physical, who's a big target, can take the top of the defense. Now you have the ability for Ladd McConkey to do what Ladd McConkey does in the short-term medium range zone," Te'o said.
"And then you add that to Mike McDaniel and all the stuff that he's going to add with the pre-snap motions. Whenever you structure your offense, you want different attributes in your wide receivers. Your slot receiver is a guy that can just occupy the middle of the defense. But you need the guy that can be that lone X wide receiver."
That's where Pierce comes in for the Chargers. The wideout is an unrestricted free agent this offseason, but there has been speculation that the Colts will use the franchise tag on him as the team is aiming to re-sign the 25-year-old.
Pierce is regarded as one of the best wide receivers available, as he is coming off a 1,000-yard performance in 2025. He averaged 21.3 yards per catch last season, giving the Chargers a perfect weapon for Justin Herbert on the deep ball. Pierce also recorded six touchdowns ahead of hitting the free agent market this offseason.
McConkey is coming off a bit of a sophomore slump as he recorded 789 passing touchdowns and six scores last season. His numbers decreased from his rookie campaign, where he posted 1,149 yards and seven touchdowns on 82 catches.
Several factors played a part in McConkey's lack of production, but the addition of Pierce would perhaps put the former Georgia product in the best position to shine as a slot receiver. That would then make Pierce the X receiver in a high-powered Mike McDaniel offense.
Then again, Spotrac has Pierce signing a four-year deal worth $80.99 million. That's an average annual value of $20.2 million. That could be a steep price for a Chargers team that needs to prioritize re-signing some of their own players, namely Odafe Oweh, and addressing the offensive line in free agency.
The Arizona Cardinals announced another addition to their coaching staff under new head coach Mike LaFleur this week. After announcing coordinators and assistants, the Cardinals announced that Wendy Laurent was hired under the Bill Bidwill Coaching Fellowship.
Laurent spent training camp last year on the Cardinals' staff under the Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching Fellowship.
He will likely work with offensive linemen or tight ends.
Laurent was the assistant tight ends coach for Ohio State in 2025 and, prior to that, was the tight ends coach for Dartmouth from 2022-2024.
He played collegiately at Penn State as an offensive lineman.
The Cardinals established the Bill Bidwill Coaching Fellowship prior to the 2015 season. Laurent is the eighth individual to participate in the program, which is designed to increase diversity and create additional opportunities for coaching experience at the highest level.
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 Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.
The first day of on-field workouts at the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine did not disappoint, where a handful of edge rushers, defensive tackles, and linebackers put on a show at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, IN.
Here are four players who could be on the Chargers' radar who increased their stock with eye-popping demonstrations of athleticism.
DL Caleb Banks, Florida
If the Chargers want to go defensive tackle in Round 1, Banks should be high on their board, that is, if he's still available at pick No. 22. Boasting a massive frame at 6-foot-6 and 327 pounds, Banks showcased rare athleticism by running a 5.04-second 40-yard dash and recording a 32-inch vertical. His 99th-percentile wingspan is the longest among defensive tackles recorded at the combine since 1999. It's also worth noting that Banks had a notable rep at the Senior Bowl, which caught the attention of head coach Jim Harbaugh.
.@GatorsFB DT Caleb Banks put on an unreal performance today:
The Chargers could address the edge rusher position with one of their first three picks, even if they bring back one of Odafe Oweh or Khalil Mack. Lawrence should be in consideration if they choose to go that route. The former UCF product excelled across all testing categories, recording a 4.52 40-yard dash, 40-inch vertical, and a 10'10" broad jump, which were the second-best among edge rushers. On the field, his athleticism translates, given that he is an explosive edge rusher who can win in multiple ways.
DL Gracen Halton, Oklahoma
The Chargers need a more active interior pass-rush presence, which Halton could provide, with his quickness and power to disrupt opposing backfields. Halton led all defensive tackles with a 36.5-inch vertical jump, the third-best for his position in over 20 years, and added a strong 4.82 40-yard dash. In his final two seasons for the Sooners, Halton recorded 8.5 sacks and 59 quarterback pressures.
Dani Dennis-Sutton, Penn State
Measuring in at 6-foot-5 and 256 pounds, he recorded a 9.93 Relative Athletic Score (RAS), ranking as the 15th-best performance by a defensive end out of over 2,000 prospects since 1987. His 6.9-second 3-cone drill was impressive for his size, dispelling pre-combine concerns regarding his lower-body quickness and agility. He had a productive final season at Penn State, where he recorded 8.5 sacks and 12 tackles for loss.
#WeAre Dani Dennis-Sutton with a crazy 6.90 in the 3-cone tonight
8 EDGEs drafted in the last decade have weighed 255+ lbs and hit 6.90 or better in the 3-cone
Joey Bosa Maxx Crosby Aidan Hutchinson Travon Walker Odafe Oweh Sam Hubbard Jordan Willis Kylie Fitts
Zoe Backstedt claimed a dominant victory in the under-23 time trial at the Road World Championships in Rwanda in 2025 [Getty Images]
Zoe Backstedt has highlighted the importance of always wearing a helmet after suffering a scary crash in training.
The Welsh cyclist suffered a broken hand and wrist in October, which saw her cyclo-cross season interrupted.
She returned to racing at the end of December, before finishing 7th in the women's elite race at the 2026 Cyclo-Cross World Championships in Hulst, Netherlands in January, just three months after her accident.
"Who knows what would have happened if I hadn't had it on, maybe I wouldn't be here today, the way the helmet broke into so many pieces," said 21-year-old Backstedt.
"When I crashed I didn't even realise what was happening, because click your fingers and it was over.
"I stood back up and had the immediate aftershock of, 'this isn't good'."
The heavy crash occurred a fortnight before Backstedt was due to start her 2025-26 season.
"My hand was hurting, got it caught in my front wheel and my head was on the ground," the Belgium-based rider told BBC Sport Wales from a training camp in Spain.
"There were so many emotions going through me. My first thought was, my cyclocross season is done.
The younger sister of fellow professional Elynor Backstedt, she feared she would not be back on her bike until the prestigious one-day road 'Spring Classics', starting at the end of February.
"I went to a specialist back in Belgium and she said that it was going to be the new year that I was going to be able to race.
"I did start crying in that moment, because I'd done so much training, and I'd done so much preparation for the cyclo-cross season.
"To think that in the space of two seconds, that is gone, you know? That's the season almost done."
Her recovery, however, was quicker than hoped.
"Once I could start training again a little bit and I was cleared from concussion, I started planning when I could get back," she added.
"Then I had a goal to look forward to and I had a race in mind that I could try and be on the start line for.
"That was the thing that was keeping me going, knowing that at some point I could, even though it was a short season, I could still do some cyclocross races."
Backstedt says the experience has left no doubt in her mind about the importance of wearing a helmet.
"Everywhere I go, I try to wear a helmet, even if it's just two kilometres away, it can save you so much if you're in an unfortunate accident."
Zoe Backstedt won the Cyclo-Cross Under-23 world title in 2024 and 2025 [Getty Images]
Despite a reduced cyclo-cross season, Backstedt returned in time to make it to the Worlds at the end of January.
And the Welsh rider admits she loves the wintery conditions cyclo-cross provides.
"The dream conditions are two degrees, raining, just like growing up in Wales," Backstedt explained.
"Everyone is cold on the start line, and then you start, and it's full gas, start to finish.
"You have some running in there, you have to get off and go up stairs, you have to do everything that cyclo-cross involves."
With a new Worlds course in Hulst, Backstedt admits there was still some trepidation when doing reconnaissance.
"Nobody had done the course before," she said.
"You get to the first downhill and we know what it's like to run up but we don't know what it's like to go down.
"You come into it the first time, and you think, 'Oh my gosh, I don't want to look down, because it's really steep,' and you think, 'How am I going to get down here? Which line do I take?'
"You stand at the top for ten minutes to watch some more people do it, and then you get to the bottom and think, 'what was I so worried about?'," she added.
Backstedt's seventh place finish was just 14 seconds off a medal, and she was an agonising four seconds off a medal in the mixed relay. An encouraging return for her first senior World Championship.
Zoe Backstedt (L) and sister Elynor (R) being supported by their father Magnus Backstedt in February 2015 [Getty Images]
The family name Backstedt carries a lot of weight in cycling circles.
Her father Magnus won Paris-Roubaix and a stage of the 1998 Tour de France, while her mother, Megan, won the British road race national title and competed for Wales at the Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpa the same year.
Both Zoe and Elynor followed suit and began to forge their careers in the professional ranks.
Backstedt says she takes a lot of inspiration from her time at Maindy Flyers in Cardiff, a cycling club with some very famous alumni.
"Elinor Barker was just a few years older than my sister, so as I was looking towards cycling as a career, she was stepping into racing and I got to watch her grow and progress in the sport.
"It's something cool to see, coming from the same club you are, riding circles around Maindy Velodrome and you're like 'Yeah, if she can do it, I can do it, maybe I can follow in those footsteps'.
"We've had a similar path into cycling and then you want to do that too."
Olympic gold medallist and Tour de France winner Geraint Thomas also began his career at the famous track, first opened in 1951 before hosting the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games.
"He progressed from Maindy to the men's world tour, so it's a little bit different, but you're still coming from the same place, doing the same sessions on a Tuesday night," she added.
Backstedt hopes she too can provide inspiration for the next generation coming through the club.
"To see all the little ones that are coming up through the sport and see if you can inspire them.
"I think even out on the roads here in Spain, I've seen some people from Maindy out riding.
"You're waving at them on the bike and you're like, 'Yeah, you could be in my team in a few years, or riding in one of the men's teams', and that's just so cool to see."
Olympic ambitions
Backstedt has lofty ambitions for her career, having already won nine world titles by the age of 20 across cyclo-cross, road and track cycling.
But there is no doubt about what the Welsh rider would like to have achieved before her career is all said and done.
"I think I have to go with the obvious dream of Olympic champion, that's one in the future that would be a very big goal of mine," said Backstedt.
"I want to go for Los Angeles 2028, I want to give my everything to be on the start line and go for a podium, that would be pretty cool to do.
"If I hadn't been sick in 2024, I would have liked to have also been on the start line [in Paris], it just wasn't my year.
"That was hard to accept but it just made me hungrier to be on the start line in LA."
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — It was 22 days since the Chicago Blackhawks played an NHL game. That changed Thursday night at Bridgestone Arena.
The Hawks’ last game here against the Nashville Predators was a illness-plagued fiasco that saw the visitors win behind goaltender Drew Commesso’s first career NHL shutout. It wasn’t the flu that clouded the Western Conference matchup this time, but rather rust.
While the Hawks’ legs were shaky, Connor Bedard was strong enough to carry the team most of the way. But they fell short in a 4-2 loss in their first game out of the Olympic break.
“I think we all felt pretty good about where we were there, especially when (Tyler Bertuzzi) gets that goal,” Bedard said. “We’ve got to manage it a little better and figure out how to close it out.”
Bertuzzi’s tiebreaking goal at 3:16 of the third period gave the Hawks a 2-1 lead, but the Predators scored three unanswered goals, handing the guests their seventh loss in eight games.
“We’ve got to find a way to win the game, that’s part of this process of growing, (when) you get the lead, you got to find a way to kill the penalty,” Hawks coach Jeff Blashill said. “It’s 2-2 and then we kind of let the third one in there, (so we’ve) got to find a way to win that game.”
Most of the Hawks were skating back into the NHL pace. They filled six minutes of first-period power-play time with minimal shots on goal, giveaways and no goals.
They broke the dam in the third period when Bertuzzi scored his team-leading 26th goal of the season. Still, the Hawks were 1-for-6 on the power play.
It was a mixed bag, with several shots on goal aligned with giveaways and short-handed chances allowed. Blashill is looking for one thing, though, and that’s goals on the man advantage.
“One-for-5 is 20%, you’d like for it to be 2-for-5, but it’s not 0-for-5, it’s not always going to look perfect,” Blashill said. “(Their) penalty kill had something to do with it. It’s something we’re going to continue trying to improve on.”
Predators right winger Matthew Wood scored on the power play at 7:12 to tie the game at 2. From there, the hosts didn’t look back.
“I thought the first half of the game, we kind of hurt ourselves with our puck play,” Blashill said. “I just thought there wasn’t probably enough poise, not enough support (but) I thought as it went along it got better and then we got better.”
Bedard scored his 24th goal of the season — a career high — at 4:13 of the second period off of a Ryan Greene pass from the boards to tie the game 1-1. The star forward was the only one in white who didn’t seem to be affected by the lengthy time off as he sent five shots on goal.
“I thought (André Burakovsky) and (Greene) were unreal tonight, like they have been all year and making it real easy for me,” Bedard said. “I think they set me up for five or six Grade A’s. That’s on me to put one more of those in and maybe it’s a different game.”
Added Blashill: “Created a lot of chances, had a lot of chances, had good jump, that’s the Connor we’ve seen lots of. Good to get him back at center at a full-time basis, (he) took a lot of faceoffs.”
If the Hawks want to start stringing wins together, the rest of the team needs to play with more energy.
The scoring opened with Predators left winger Filip Forsberg sending an up-close snipe past goaltender Spencer Knight (22 saves) at the 13:50 mark in the first period. Forsberg collected the puck from defenseman Artyom Levshunov, who was forced into a turnover.
It was the blueliner’s first game back from the “program” the team placed him in over the Olympic break. The individual training was meant to improve his balance of offensive and defensive skills.
The turnover was a bad break, but it wasn’t all negative for the defenseman. He stopped an almost certain 2-on-1 short-handed opportunity in the third period.
It’s the ongoing story of trial and error for Levshunov. For each bad play, there’s a flash of potential.
“The guy’s all over him, he probably needs to eat it, but he probably needs better support,” Blashill said of Levshunov’s turnover. “We took off up the ice like there was no pressure, but there was actually tons of pressure.
“I thought he was rusty early. … I thought he got better as the game went along, for sure.”
Fresno State outfielder Sky Collins is back in the lineup this season, less than a year after suffering a severe ankle injury during the 2025 Mountain West championship.
Collins, a former Buchanan High School and Fresno City College standout, was hurt while sliding into second base in last year's title game.
His 2025 season ended as he was taken off the field, but he said he never doubted he would be ready for the start of 2026.
"I always expected to be on the field day one and it was a long humbling process... one week I'd feel good but I always knew that even if it was a little painful, I'd push through and be out there opening day," Collins said.
Collins opened the season as Fresno State's starting center fielder and is hitting .370 in the early going.
Head coach Ryan Overland credited the program's strength staff for helping Collins return. He also said encouragement came from a familiar face in Fresno State athletics.
"Every time I see coach Hill he brings up coach Hill and seeing Sky in the weight room and he knows that process of what it takes to get through so... anybody who gives their blessing of toughness and being a Bulldog, there's no one better than coach Hill," Overland said.
Now healthy, Collins said he is embracing a leadership role while playing in front of those who watched him grow up.
"Being able to have my family in the stands at all times - seeing my little brother, my little sister, my grandpa, my grandma... my whole family watches me and not have to travel far... it's been a dream to play on this field and to grow up here and to play here," he said.
Overland said he hopes to have Owen Faust and Cam Schneider return this weekend, while Cayden Munster remains a couple of weeks away.
The Utah Royals and Chicago Red Stars play at America First Field in Sandy on Saturday, March 16, 2024.
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Scott G Winterton, Deseret News
Utah continues to grow its reputation as the state of sport, and the country is finally noticing.
A recent article from The Athletic published this week called Utah “a sports boomtown” with its multiple professional teams and as the future home of a second Winter Olympics in 2034.
While the majority of the article explored Utah’s efforts to land an MLB team, Miller Sports + Entertainment president Michelle Smith believes the NWSL’s Utah Royals “fit in right at the top” in the state’s “sports boomtown” reputation, she told the Deseret News Thursday at the team’s kit launch event.
Smith has been a vocal champion for the Royals, even raising her hand in a meeting and saying, “Hey, I really think we need to keep the Royals” when there was an opportunity for another buyer to purchase the team.
Smith saw value in the Royals, especially within the community, as well as the power that came from both the Royals and Real Salt Lake working together to elevate each other, she said.
For Smith, it’s important for the Utah Royals to use its platform as a women’s professional team to make an impact on the community whether it’s through players building a love of sports in youth or giving back to the community with service projects at every home match.
“I am so excited that Utah gets to be the stewards of women’s professional sports and not just soccer, but softball and volleyball,” she said.
Young Royals fans enjoy the game as the Utah Royals and Chicago Red Stars play at America First Field in Sandy on Saturday, March 16, 2024.
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Scott G Winterton, Deseret News
It was the professional home for U.S. women’s national team stars Christen Press, Kelley O’Hara and Becky Sauerbrunn. But over the course of three seasons, the Royals never reached the playoffs.
In December 2020, Hansen sold the team to an ownership group led by Chris and Angie Long, which moved the club back to Kansas City following the 2020 season.
Unlike the original iteration of the club, the new Royals didn’t inherit any personnel and had to start from scratch.
The 2024 Utah Royals featured a new sporting director, head coach and an entirely new roster assembled through the NWSL entry draft, free agency and one lone player through the expansion draft: captain Paige Monaghan (the other expansion draftee, Elyse Bennett, was traded days later).
The Royals struggled on the pitch in their inaugural season, leading to a coaching change midway through the season.
Defender Kate Del Fava was drafted by the Royals in 2020 and is the only player on the team who has played for both iterations of the club.
On Thursday, Del Fava said the current Utah Royals “really doesn’t” feel like the same organization she began her career with.
“It feels totally different this time around,” she said. “This time around, it just really feels like it’s one club, it’s one Utah, it’s one community. And it feels like the women’s side is just as invested in as the men’s side and it’s taken just as seriously, and they’re just as proud to have us here representing the state.”
The support of the team’s current ownership was evident Thursday when Michelle Smith became emotional during her remarks.
“I think any time you have a part of ownership get up and get choked up talking about the team, that really motivates the girls,” Del Fava said.
Larry H. Miller Company board chairman Steve Miller, right, and Steve Starks, Miller Company CEO, speak at a press conference at America First Field in Sandy on Friday, April 18, 2025. The Miller family and Miller Sports + Entertainment bought a controlling interest in the Real Salt Lake and Utah Royals FC soccer teams from David Blitzer in a deal that includes the Utah Monarchs, America First Field, and Zions Bank Training Center and Zions Bank Stadium in Herriman.
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Laura Seitz, Deseret News
Monaghan also spoke highly of the Millers at this season’s Royals media day.
“I think when you strive for perfection and you arrive at greatness, that’s a pretty great place to be, so, I think, obviously, they’ve (the Millers) done that in the community. They did that a while ago with Utah Jazz, obviously, the Bees and now us,” she said. “So to be a part of that is what you want in elite sports. So I think it starts in the top and funnels down. So selfishly, I’m so excited that I get to reap that benefit.”
Monaghan pointed to the infrastructure the Royals have built, comparing it to her college days at Butler University.
She said while she was in college, she liked getting extra individual reps with her coaches, but with only “two coaches, they didn’t have time to do that,” which left Monaghan to do them on her own.
That’s not the case with the Utah Royals, according to Monaghan.
“Now, we have this infrastructure where I can do everything I can to be the best I can be, and I have the resources to do that,” she said.
Monaghan’s and Del Fava’s sentiments about the Miller ownership group are part of Michelle Smith’s hopes for the club’s future.
“I hope that we create an environment and a culture for these women athletes to feel like they’re valued and they’re seen and they’re respected and they have an incredible career and can look back and say, ‘I couldn’t have played for a better team. ... I couldn’t have played for a better club and a better ownership,’ and that will continue to build into their DNA as they continue to carry on in wherever their journey takes them.”
What’s Michelle Smith’s other hope for the Royals to accomplish on the pitch?
“Obviously, my greatest hope is that we can get a title, for sure. There’s nothing more fun than to experience the success on the field, especially at that level,” she said.
It has been a few years since there was drama with the Arizona Cardinals and quarterback Kyler Murray. It has returned.
While the Cardinals have not said outright that they want to trade Murray, the report is already out.
But a trade is not what Murray would prefer. According to Fox Sports' Ralph Vacchiano and Henry McKenna, Murray would like to be released by the start of free agency because he believes he will be the top quarterback available and will be able to sign with the team of his choice.
But on the other side is a team source that says the Cardinals are "frustrated" with Murray, citing the same criticisms that were said of him years ago before Jonathan Gannon became head coach. The source also said that, following Murray's foot injury, his mobility is "shot."
We have to point out that putting that out there for a writer to report doesn't help the Cardinals be able to trade him. He has three years remaining on his contract, all of his 2026 money is guaranteed, and he is due a $17 million roster bonus on March 15 that will guarantee his 2027 salary of $19.5 million.
The Cardinals would save $34.7 million in cap space with a trade, carrying $17.9 million in dead money.
Why would a team trade for a guy whose mobility is gone and has over $70 million in guarantees remaining?
It just solidifies the fact they will have to release Murray.
If Murray is released, because the Cardinals are on the hook for all his 2026 salary, he could sign with a team for the league minimum and land in a potentially great situation talent-wise, such as Minnesota, Indianapolis, Atlanta or even perhaps Kansas City.
However, a release would mean the Cardinals carry over $54.8 million in dead money and lose about $2 million in cap space, or they designate him a post-June 1 release and carry his $52.7 million cap hit until after June 1, and then saving $5.1 million against the cap and carrying $47.5 million in dead money this year and another $7.2 million in 2027.
The new league year begins March 11. Murray's roster bonus is due March 15. While new head coach Mike LaFleur has said there isn't a deadline on the quarterback decision, it really seems like there is.
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 Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.
Clippers guard Kris Dunn drives to the basket in front of Minnesota's Donte DiVincenzo during the Clippers' 94-88 loss Thursday at Intuit Dome. (Kyusung Gong / Associated Press)
Anthony Edwards scored 31 points, Donte DiVincenzo added 18 and the surging Minnesota Timberwolves beat the Clippers 94-88 on Thursday night.
Jaden McDaniels and Ayo Dosunmu each scored 12 points and Rudy Gobert had 13 rebounds to help the Timberwolves improve to 5-1 since Feb. 9 and 3-1 since the All-Star break.
Edwards, returning to the site of the All-Star Game, where he was the MVP, was 12 for 24 from the floor and sealed the victory with a step-back three-pointer over two defenders for a 92-88 lead with 42.9 seconds left.
Derrick Jones Jr. scored 18 points and Bennedict Mathurin added 14 for the Clippers, who struggled from the outset with a season-low 38 points in the first half. Kris Dunn had 11 points for the Clippers (27-31), who have lost three consecutive games for the first time since December.
The Clippers struggled on offense without star Kawhi Leonard, out because of ankle soreness. The Clippers shot 40.5% from the floor, including 18.2% (four for 22) in the second quarter. Minnesota shot 43.4% in the game.
The Timberwolves (37-23) scored just 15 points in the second quarter and still topped the Clippers, who had 11. Minnesota led 44-38 at halftime behind 12 points from DiVincenzo and 11 from Edwards.
The Clippers led by six in the third quarter and were up 68-63 heading into the fourth. Edwards' drive and reverse layup put the Timberwolves up for good at 76-74 with 7:40 remaining.
The Clippers pulled within one three times in the last 2½ minutes, but Edwards answered each time. He scored the Timberwolves' last nine points.
Up next for Clippers: vs. New Orleans on Sunday night.
SHABBONA, Ill. (WTVO/WQRF) — Rockford Christian’s girls volleyball team went to the state tournament last fall. Could another trip to state be on the horizon for some of those same players in basketball? The Royal Lions are one win away from doing that after winning the 1A Indian Creek Sectional Championship Thursday night.
The Royal Lions dominated Varna Midland 57-25.
Rockford Christian now advances to the 1A Dundee-Crown Super-Sectional Monday night in Carpentersville to face North Shore Country Day of Winnetka.
Watch the media player above for highlights of this game and for postgame reaction from Rockford Christian.
Copyright 2026 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Michigan State basketball conquered some demons on Thursday night, going into Mackey Arena and defeating Purdue for the first time since 2014, 76-74.
The win comes at a big moment for the Spartans, with March right around the corner, and seeding for the NCAA Tournament at an all time high importance.
Following the win, here are our three takeaways from the win:
Momentum
The Spartans are heading into the best time of the year, March, and with three regular season games left, this was the perfect time for a massive win like this.
Conquering the Mackey demons will bolster this team into the final stretch of games before the biggest games of the year unfold.
Tourney seeding
As of sunday the Spartans were on the 4-line, but this was the best win for the team to bolster their resume towards the 3-line.
Getting to the 3-line and avoiding a 1-seed in the Sweet 16, and a 5-seed in the round of 32, is the upmost importance,
Carr at the 4
There is no denying it, this team is at its best when Carr is playing power forward, and it is a move we need to see Izzo make moving forward.
Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Michigan State news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Cory Linsner on X @Rex_Linzy
MARLBOROUGH — Maddy Glynn got her golden moment, and the Algonquin girls’ hockey team gets to move on in the MIAA tournament.
After Glynn garnered career point No. 100 in the third-seeded Titans’ 3-0 win over No. 30 Westford in a Division 1 Round of 32 game Thursday night, the Algonquin senior captain glided off the ice surface at New England Sports Center with a glistening smile across her face.
Can it get any better than this?
“No,” Glynn admitted before saying. “It was unreal. I love my team so much. I have so much joy in my heart. It was such a great accomplishment and, obviously, a weight lifted off my shoulders.”
Algonquin captain Maddy Glynn (who is a senior at AMSA) talks about her milestone moment (100 career points), moving from defense to forward as a freshman and helping the Titans win an MIAA tournament game. pic.twitter.com/xqJwm8fDui
“It’s an awesome exclamation point for her career,” Algonquin first-year coach Will Downs said.
As an eighth grader in 2022, Glynn watched from the seats at TD Garden when the Titans claimed a Division 2 state championship in Boston. A year later, Glynn joined the Algonquin varsity team and started to produce points right away as a first-time forward — after spending her childhood playing defense.
“I took that role, and I did the best I could at it,” said Glynn, who lives in Marlborough. “I guess I just grew into it over the years.”
The AMSA student (Algonquin co-ops with AMSA, Hudson, Marlborough and Nashoba) secured 18 points (10 goals, 8 assists) as a freshman, 16 points (9 goals, 7 assists) as a sophomore and 19 points (11 goals, 8 assists) last season.
With 45 points (26 goals, 19 assists) heading into her team’s first Division 1 MIAA tournament game (the Titans moved up from Division 2 this winter), Glynn needed two more to reach the 100-point plateau on Thursday.
In the first period, Glynn fired a shot that ricocheted off the post as neither team scored in the opening 15 minutes. Scoreless still halfway through the second frame, Glynn raced down a puck on a penalty kill and rifled a left-handed shot into the back of the net for a shorthanded goal.
“A sense of relief after that first goal went in,” Downs said.
A goal from Algonquin freshman Annabelle Preciado with 39 seconds left in the second period gave the Titans some breathing room and set the stage for Glynn’s golden moment.
Less than five minutes into the third period, Glynn received a pass from teammate Shay O’Sullivan and skated into the zone on a mini breakaway before potting the puck for her second goal of the game — and 100th point of her career.
Algonquin girls hockey senior captain Maddy Glynn records her 100th career point with this goal in the third period of a Division 1 playoff game against Westford.
Glynn is the seventh player in program history to hit the 100-point milestone. pic.twitter.com/XIkP5wzGEJ
“It was unreal,” Glynn said. “If you asked my freshman-year self if I would’ve made it here, I would’ve said ‘You’re crazy.’ It’s an unreal feeling and I’m so glad I got to achieve this goal, especially with my team behind me.
“My heart is filled.”
Glynn is now the seventh player in Algonquin girls’ hockey history to reach the milestone — joining Kayla Curran, Andrea Fahey, Elizabeth Holmes, Emily Johns, Amy MacGlashing and Kerryn O’Connell in the 100-point club.
“I’m super proud of all her hard work and dedication to the team, whether it is on or off the ice,” Johns told the T&G Thursday. “No one is more deserving of this accomplishment than her. She truly embodies what Gonk hockey is all about.”
“She’s leading by example,” said Downs, who is in his first season as head coach after serving as an assistant coach for the past handful of seasons. “We have so many players that look up to her and how to play the game right, and she’s been definitely showing out this year.”
The win comes on the heels of Algonquin’s lone loss of the season, a 5-2 defeat to Bishop Feehan on Feb. 18. Yet, eight days later, the Titans took care of business — while their senior captain had her shining moment — in their opening playoff game against Westford (11-8-2).
“Awesome night for her,” Downs said. “The whole team’s wicked excited for her. It’s kind of surreal, a little bit, but it’s time to concentrate on the next game.”
Algonquin (21-1) advances to play either No. 14 Malden Catholic or No. 19 Beverly on Sunday (5:40 p.m.) back at NESC.
FINAL: Algonquin 3, Westford 0
Maddy Glynn scores two goals (and records her 100th career point) while Addy Cagan makes 19 saves for the shutout as Algonquin beats Westford in a Division 1 Round of 32 game.
But before then, Maddy Glynn got to savor her milestone moment for a few hours on Thursday night. It certainly tasted a bit sweeter after a tournament win for Algonquin.
“The only better thing than this is winning the state championship,” Glynn said. “So, I hope to make it there next.”
—Contact Tommy Cassell at tcassell@telegram.com. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter, @tommycassell44.
Maddy Cavalier scored 15 points and Rees Hall had 13 to lead Cedar Cliff to a 58-33 win over Governor Mifflin in the seventh place game of the District 3 Class 6A girls basketball tournament on Thursday night.
Jatiyah Case had 11 points to lead the Mustangs, who have qualified for the PIAA playoffs and as the eighth-place finisher in District 3 will play District 7 champion on Friday, March 6 in the first round.
Cedar Cliff will play the District 1 champion in the first round.
Gov. Mifflin is 18-9 heading into the state playoffs and Cedar Cliff is 19-7.
Exeter grabbed the last PIAA Class 5A playoff qualifying spot on Thursday night by beating Red Land in a boys basketball game
The Eagles (18-10) advance to the PIAA playoffs after winning the ninth-place game, 56-45, and will play the District 7 champion on Friday, March 6.
Dylan Donate led Exeter with 25 points and Braylon Reinert had 16.
The Eagles led 13-7 after the first quarter as Donate had five points and Reinert four.
They stretched it to 32-17 at halftime. Donate had 5 points and Reinert and Jackson Kozik each had four.
Red Land scratched its way back into the game, outscoring Exeter 17-12 in the third quarter, as Colton Rose had five points. Donate and Reinert heac had six points in the quarter.
In the fourth quarter, Donate had nine points as the Eagles staved off the Patriots (12-14) to punch their ticket to the state playoffs.
Four Panthers scored in double figures as Schuylkill Valley defeated Big Spring 60-52 on Thursday at night in the third-place game of the District 3 Class 4A boys basketball tournament.
The fifth-seeded Panthers (16-10) were led by Josiah Urbaez who had 14 points and Logan Cammauf who had 13. Alex Aletras and Ervin Ortiz each had 11.
Schuylkill Valley had already qualified for the PIAA playoffs and will play the District 2 champion on the first round on Friday, March 6.
Big Spring (14-11), which got 26 from Jovan Strine, will play the District 4 champion in the first round.
Schuylkill Valley led 17-14 after the first quarter as the Panthers made five 3-pointers – Aletras had two and Urbaez, Ortiz and Zachary Reeser one each.
They led 30-26 at halftime with Cammauf scoring seven points.
Schuylkill Valley opened a seven-point lead after three quarters, going ahead 45-38. Ortiz hit two 3-pointers.
In the fourth quarter, Strine made 12 of Big Spring’s 14 points, but Urbaez offset his efforts scoring 10 points and Cammauf made all four of his free throws.
Wyomissing claimed the last qualifying spot in Class 4A for District 3 in boys basketball on Thursday night.
The Spartans defeated Oley Valley, 67-44, in the fifth-place game to advance next weekend’s PIAA tournament. Wyomissing (16-10) will play the District 12 champion on Friday night.
Sophomore Brady Eisenhower led the Spartans with 21 points, making four 3-pointers.
Senior Dom Arguelles had 16 points and classmate Daniel Moyer had 14.
Oley Valley (14-11) got 16 points from Luke Truchi and 10 from Nick DeBalko.
Here are photos from Reading Eagle photographer Bill Unrich of Wilson’s overtime win over Dallastown on Thursday in the District 3 Class 6A championship game at Manheim Township High School.
Wilson defeated Dallastown tonight 42-37 in overtime to capture the District 3 Class 6A girls basketball championship.
The Bulldogs, who won the BCIAA title after going 12-0 in league play in the regular season, avenged a 49-38 loss to Dallastown on Dec. 22, Wilson’s last loss. The Bulldogs have won 19 straight heading into next weekend’s PIAA playoffs.
Wilson will play the District 1 11th-place finisher in the first round of the state playoffs on Friday, March 6.
Dallastown (24-4) will play the District 1 seventh-place finisher on Friday.
It began with the rekindling of one of the most important connections he made when he took over the Spartans over 30 years ago. He met with Boilermakers coaching legend Gene Keady for breakfast and spent 90 minutes talking about both old times and new.
Izzo said the visit "motivated me on what’s real.” He passed that perspective on to the Spartans at their team meal.
"He was phenomenal,” Izzo said of their conversation.
“... He gave me a lot, because I always apologize like I'm supposed to, because they call me old or old school and all that crap. He made me realize winning, back when he started — it was somewhere A.D., I don’t think it was B.C. — but it was a long time ago.
“But what he did hasn’t changed. And that’s the beauty of the man."
Izzo recalled his first big win at Mackey as MSU's coach. It came on Dec. 30, 1997, during Mateen Cleaves’ sophomore season against a Purdue team ranked No. 5.
Izzo said Keady became a kind of coaching mentor to him after his predecessor Judd Heathcote — a close friend of Keady’s — retired and moved to Washington. Izzo was the presenter when Keady was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2023.
That doesn’t mean Keady was all that happy for Izzo after Thursday’s game, though.
“He's a Purdue guy, now,” Izzo said. “I went and saw him after the game and he gave me the ‘nice game,’ but I know he wanted to ring my neck.
“That too is what I love about him. He’s so loyal to this place. I hope coaches and players get to be loyal to their school, because this guy is a treasure. He's a treasure. And I mean that.”
Ten area Class A and B high school girls basketball teams clinched berths in SoDak 16 state-qualifying games with semifinal wins in region tournaments on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026.
The SoDak 16 state-qualifying games are scheduled for Thursday, March 5. Winners of those games advance to state tourneys March 12-14 at Watertown (Class A) and Brookings (Class B).
Here's the SoDak 16 pairings and more on the area high school girls and boys basketball games on Feb. 26.
SoDak 16 Class A-B Pairings
Class A matchups include No. 1 seed Hamlin (20-1) vs. No. 16 Sisseton (11-10), No. 2 Mahpiya Luta (20-0) vs. No. 15 McCook Central-Montrose (15-7), No. 3 Wagner (18-2) vs. No. 14 Dell Rapids (15-7), No. 4 Sioux Valley (20-2) vs. No. 13 St. Thomas More (16-5), No. 5 Lennox (18-3) vs. No. 12 Miller (17-5), No. 6 Sioux Falls Christian (18-4) vs. No. 11 Groton Area (16-6), No. 7 West Central (17-4) vs. No. 10 Mobridge-Pollock (17-4) and No. 8 Rapid City Christian (17-4) vs. No. 9 Lakota Tech (18-4).
Class B matchups area No. 1 Lyman (20-2) vs. No. 16 McIntosh (14-7), No. 2 Parkston (19-3) vs. No. 15 De Smet (11-11), No. 3 Bennett County (19-3) vs. No. 14 Ipswich (15-7), No. 4 Ethan (20-2) vs. No. 13 Deubrook Area (13-9), No. 5 Colman-Egan (21-1) vs. No. 12 Warner (16-6), No. 6 Harding County (21-1) vs. No. 11 Jones County (15-5), No. 7 Centerville (20-2) vs. No. 10 Highmore-Harrold (18-4), No. 8 Waubay-Summit (20-2) vs. No. 9 Corsica-Stickney (16-5).
Dates and times for the SoDak 16 games are slated to be finalized on Friday, Feb. 27.
Region 1A
Fourth-seeded Sisseton closed with a 15-6 scoring run and knocked off top-seeded Aberdeen Roncalli (16-5) in a semifinal game at Aberdeen. Saylor Langager scored 12 points, Elliot Hortness 11 and Piper Langager eight for Sisseton. Morgan Helms tallied nine points and Rylee Voeller six for Roncalli.
In the other semifinal at Groton, second-seeded Groton Area outlasted third-seeded Milbank (17-5) 54-52 in double-overtime. Jaedyn Penning scored 20 points, Jerica Locke 15, Kella Tracy 12 and Rylee Dunker seven for Groton Area. Belle Pauli finished with 16, Anna Neugebauer 13 and Violet Johnson 10 for Milbank.
Pauli's 3-pointer at the buzzer in regulation tied the game at 40. Dunker's field goal with 39.5 seconds left tied the game at 44 after the first overtime. Tracy hit the go-ahead field goal with 1:45 remaining in the second overtime. Dunker and Locke each added two free throws to offeset a field goal by Pauli and two free throws by Susie Schuneman for Milbank in the final 26 seconds. The Bulldogs were unable to get off a final shot in the final seconds.
Top-seeded Hamlin and second-seeded Sioux Valley each cruised to semifinal wins on their home courts. Hamlin handed fourth-seeded Florence-Henry (10-12) 55-17 at the Hamlin Education Center and Sioux Valley topped third-seeded Clark-Willow Lake (18-4) 55-32 in Volga.
Issie Steffensen and Addie Jensen each scored 17 points and Paxton Neuendorf added 11 for Hamlin. Addison Byer led Florence-Henry with six.
Kailey Cradduck notched 14 points and 12 rebounds for Sioux Valley, which took control by outscoring the Cyclones 36-13 in the middle two quarters. Liberty Trygstad added 13 and Talya Vincent 12. Shelby Begeman's eight points and eight rebounds and Kamryn Nesheim's six points paced CWL.
Region 6A
Semifinal winners included top-seeded Mobridge-Pollock, who rolled past No. 5 Platte-Geddes 77-28 in Mobridge, and No. 2 Miller, who turned back No. 3 Cheyenne-Eagle Butte 57-34 at Miller.
Cheyenne-Eagle Butte ended its season at 17-5 and Platte-Geddes 8-14.
Region 1B
At Summit, top-seeded Waubay-Summit moved on with a 52-41 win over fifth-seeded Hitchcock-Tulare (12-10). Addison Heinje scored 11 of her game-high 34 points in the fourth quarter and made 17 of 20 free throws, including a perfect 6-for-6 in the final period. Brynlee Amdahl contributed eight points. Gracyn Bixler had 13 points and Cambree Hoekman 11 for HT.
In the other semifinal at Mellette, third-seeded Warner outlasted second-seeded Northwestern (15-7) 36-34 in overtime. The Monarchs avenged an early season 32-29 loss to the Wildcats.
In games played at Dakota State University in Madison, fourth-seeded De Smet beat top-seeded Arlington (15-7) 87-80 in overtime and third-seeded Deubrook Area followed with a 39-37 win over second-seeded Castlewood (13-9).
In regular-season matchups, De Smet beat Arlington 70-43 and Castlewood topped Deubrook Area 33-20.
Brynlee Hanson's field goal with 30 seconds left helped Deubrook Area pull even at 37. After a steal by Neely Gustad with 23 seconds remaining, Matte Bauman scored on a drive with 4.1 seconds left to put the Dolphins ahead. Bauman was fouled on the play but couldn't convert the three-point play. Castlewood, however, was unable to get off a shot in the closing seconds.
Peyton Trooien tallied 12 points and six rebounds, Mataya Gouws 11 and six and Bauman nine and seven for Deubrook Area. Ava Ruml recorded 12 points and 16 rebounds and Sophia Kudrna nine points for Castlewood.
Region 6B
Jada Baloun poured in 27 points to lead top-seeded Highmore-Harrold to a 53-41 win on its home court against fourth-seeded North Central (15-7). Elle Stagg added 11 points for HH and coach Mike Ring, who became the 13th coach in state girls basketball history to record 400 wins on Feb. 24. He is now 401-274 in 31 seasons for Highmore and Highmore-Harrold. Ella Battie (16 points and nine rebounds) and Tylee Vander Vorst (nine points) led North Central.
At Selby, third-seeded Ipswich downed second-seeded Herreid-Selby Area 63-48 by getting 23 points and 11 rebounds from Marley Guthmiller, 18 points from Gabby Wald and seven points and 11 rebounds from Tristan Geditz. HSA (13-8) received 20 points and seven rebounds from Katie Allbee and 15 and 17 from Jordyn Rossow. Alyssa Kaup added eight rebounds.
Harrisburg records sweep over Watertown
Class AA boys and girls basketball teams are wrapping up their regular seasons this week and Watertown's squads dropped Eastern South Dakota Conference games to Harrisburg on Feb. 26.
At Watertown, fifth-rated Class AA Harrisburg slipped past fourth-rated Watertown 60-55 with a 20-9 fourth-quarter surge. David Doe led the Tigers (15-5) with 17 points. Stellen Larson contributed 15 points, nine rebounds and eight assists and Crayton Jibben 13 points. Carter Buisker scored 18 points, Jack Mack 17 and Jackson McClemans 15 for Watertown (14-5). Mack also had 13 rebouns and eight assists, McClemans six assists and four steals and Isaac Rehorst nine rebounds.
In the girls' game at Harrisburg, the host Tigers (10-10) used 10 points and 13 rebounds from Claire McCallum to win 49-26. Allison Flanagan chipped in with 10 points and six rebounds and Emersyn Geddes nine points and five assists. Jordan Remmers led Watertown (3-16) with 10 points and seven rebounds. Ellie Thury added five and seven.
The Watertown teams play Pierre on Saturday. The girls host and the boys visit Pierre. Both games are slated for 2 p.m.
Follow Watertown Public Opinion sports reporter Roger Merriam on X (formerly known as Twitter) @PO_Sportsor email: rmerriam@thepublicopinion.com
Feb. 26— Three area wrestlers have advanced to the Class A quarterfinals on the first day of the state wrestling meet at Grand Casino Arena in St. Paul Thursday.
Westfield sophomore Bentley Miller defeated Jamison Meager of Paynesville on a 6-3 decision in his first match at 121-pounds, GMLOS's Drake Payne beat Wabasso's Mason Kampsen 18-1 at 215, and GMLOS's Kloe Meyer pinned Lisarayne Alexander in the first period in the 235-pound match to advance.
Nine area wrestlers lost their first match and will now compete in the wrestlebacks.
Westfield's Easton Busho was pinned in the first period by LPGE-Browerville at 107, GMLOS's Parker Armagost lost to Wyatt Pilarski of Holdingford on a 20-3 tech. fall at 127, GMLOS's Cael Smith lost to Kyler Thier of Jackson County Central 17-0 at 145, Westfield's Cayden Maly lost to Gavyn Hlucny of Crookston 15-0 on a tech fall at 152, GMLOS's Wyatt Krull was pinned in the first period by Ryan Peterson of United North Central at 285, Chloe Hubbard of GMLOS was pinned by Trinity Smaker of Miles Lacs in the second period at 106, Zoe Steinkamp of GMLOS lost to Isabella McPhee of Proctor-Hermantown on a 10-2 major decision, GMLOS's Willow Dewey lost 10-2 to Kataniya Hernandez-Nelson of Adrian on a 10-0 major decision and GMLOS's Brandy Christenson was pinned by Madilyn Pulk of Badger-GB-MR in the second period.
The Brooklyn Nets (15-43) have not won a game since coming back from the All-Star break and part of the reason for that is the team being unable to play well for all four quarters. Brooklyn had another chance of ending their losing streak with the San Antonio Spurs (43-16) coming to Barclays Center, but they failed in being able to win a game against one of the best teams in the NBA.
The Nets lost to the Spurs on Thursday 126-110 in a game where Brooklyn didn't earn the lead once while also falling behind by as many as 26 points in a lopsided game. Forward Michael Porter Jr. had 25 points and 14 rebounds for one of his better games in recent memory while backup center Day'Ron Sharpe had 14 points and 11 rebounds coming off the bench.
The Nets did a great job of limiting center Victor Wembanyama's impact as he scored just 12 points on 3-of-9 shooting from the field, but Julian Champagnie scored 26 points by taking advantage of the gravity that Wembanyama has. Brooklyn will be facing the Boston Celtics on Friday, but for now, here are the Nets player grades following Thursday's loss to the Spurs:
Nolan Traore: C+
Traore did a good job of scoring the ball overall as he was penetrating the paint on almost every possession, but he also had some trouble trying to get daylight with Victor Wembanyama in the game. Traore has been doing a great job of being aggressive with the ball in his hands, but the team expects to create more scoring opportunities for his teammates than he did against the Spurs.
Egor Demin: B
Demin had an interesting game against the Spurs as he wasn't too aggressive with getting some of his shots off, but he finally put his passing chops on full display by getting close to 10 assists. What the Nets have to be hoping for is that at some point this season, Demin can show his ability to put the scoring and passing together instead of doing just one or the other.
Michael Porter Jr.: B
Porter had a slow start to this game in terms of his scoring as the Spurs' defense did a great job of making him take tough shots for the majority of the first 24 minutes. However, in the third quarter, Porter woke up in a huge way by scoring 17 points in the period to pair with his excellent rebounding to make up for his poor performance in that aspect against the Mavericks.
Noah Clowney: C+
Clowney had a solid performance against the Spurs as he was efficient with his offensive touches, showing that he is likely over his extended drought of the past month or so. Clowney had some issues guarding his man without fouling and didn't excel in any other category, but his offensive contributions were encouraging to watch with his recent shooting struggles being considered.
Nic Claxton: B-
Claxton had arguably his toughest matchup of the season with him having to go against Victor Wembanyama, but Claxton handled himself well aside from fouling out early in the fourth quarter. Claxton did a good job of scoring around the rim along with doing a good job of rebounding and passing the ball while also bothering Wembanyama on most possessions.
Ziaire Williams: F
Williams struggled with his shooting in this one as he couldn't get much to drop from the perimeter, especially with the way that the Spurs were closing out hard on the shooters. Williams also had his fair share of struggles on the defensive end of the floor with San Antonio running their offense down to a science for the majority of the contest.
Danny Wolf: B-
Wolf did a good job scoring the ball from all over the floor and the fact that his three-pointer was falling helped open up the rest of his game, especially driving to the rim. Wolf did a good job of rebounding the basketball during his time on the floor and did a better job of taking care of the basketball, but Brooklyn didn't have much to prevent the Spurs from exerting their will.
Day'Ron Sharpe: B+
Sharpe had one of his better performances of the season despite having to against Wembanyama and Luke Kornet during his time on the floor as he played within himself. Sharpe did a good job of finishing in the paint and was all over the boards on both ends of the floor, but he also turned the ball over more than he usually does when he has the ball in his hands.
Ochai Agbaji: D
Agbaji went scoreless against the Spurs as he couldn't get any of his shots to fall or get to the free-throw line, making this his worst offensive performance since coming to the team earlier in February. Part of Agbaji's appeal is also on the defensive end of the floor and while he typically brings a solid effort on that end of the court, he has to be better offensively.
Drake Powell: C-
Powell was solid, if unspectacular, on the offensive end during his time on the floor as he took the shots that came to him and didn't look for much more than that. Powell didn't make much of an impact during his time coming off the bench, but the good news is that he was ready to play once he stepped on the floor, something that has been an issue for him recently.
Do you remember what your life was like in February of 2014? It probably looked a lot different from right now (I personally went from a college sophomore to a husband and father of two), and that was the last time Michigan State won at Mackey Arena. Until Thursday night...
Michigan State showed resiliency to pull off an impressive road upset of top 10 Purdue, winning by the final score of 76-74 on Thursday night. The Spartans nearly blew a late lead, but a buzzer beater three-pointer from Purdue All-American Braden Smith came up short.
The first half was full of excitement and back-and-forth play between these two highly-ranked teams. The Spartans found themselves in an early hole, down by seven points within the first four minutes. But Michigan State rallied with a 10-0 run of their own to get back into the game. Neither team would lead by anymore than five points from that point forward, with Purdue carrying a 39-36 lead into the break.
The second half was similar to the first with back-and-forth play between these two talented team, but Michigan State was able to build an eight-point lead late in the game. Purdue rallied, though, and luckily their final shot came up short as the buzzer sounded.
Michigan State got huge performances from a number of players, with Carson Cooper leading the way at 15 points and six rebounds. Kur Teng (13 points off the bench), Jeremy Fears Jr. (12 points) and Coen Carr (11 points) were the other three Spartans to reach double-digits in points in the win.
The win over Purdue at Mackey Arena was the first for the Spartans since February of 2014, snapping a seven-game road losing streak against the Boilermakers. With the win, Michigan State improves to 23-5 overall and 13-4 in Big Ten play. The victory also keeps Michigan State's slim chances of winning a share of the Big Ten championship in play.
The Spartans will now head to Indiana this weekend for another monster road game. Tipoff from Bloomington, Ind. is scheduled for 3:45 p.m. ET on Sunday.
Contact/Follow us @The SpartansWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page onFacebookto follow ongoing coverage of Michigan State news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Robert Bondy on X @RobertBondy5.
Feb. 26—There are 10 Greater Spokane League teams that have reached the regional round of the state basketball playoffs. Here's a look at each matchup. Top eight seeds are "protected" and advance to state venue games starting Wednesday at the Tacoma Dome and Yakima Valley SunDome. Seeds No. 9 and below play in loser-out games.
All games on Saturday.
Boys
4A: (5) Gonzaga Prep vs. (4) Glacier Peak, 2 p.m. at North Creek HS. What a difference one spot in the brackets makes. G-Prep (18-6) went undefeated in league play and was the GSL champ, but due to the Bullpups' 65-53 loss to Richland (21-0) in the district title game, they end up as the fifth seed and have to travel to Bothell for their regional game.
The senior-laden Bullpups got an offensive boost when Dylynn Groves (14.6 ppg) returned to the lineup from injury in mid-December, and no team in the tournament plays tougher defense.
3A: (3) Mt. Spokane vs. (6) Prairie, noon at West Valley HS. The big question is when does last year's GSL MVP Jaden Ghoreishi take the floor again? He averaged 18.4 points per game early but last played on Dec. 20, missing the entire league season with blood clots in his lungs. His health now assured, he has resumed practicing with the Wildcats (17-6) and coach David Wagenblast hopes to have him back soon, if not this weekend.
3A: (13) Central Valley vs. (12) Liberty (Renton), noon at Issaquah HS. The Bears (18-7) benefited from a buzzer-beating shot by Cameron Walls on Tuesday to advance to this loser-out game. CV is dangerous on all three levels, with Walls at point guard, Orland Axton (19.1 ppg) on the wing and big man Emerson Lippoldt underneath.
2A: (4) Pullman vs. (5) Tumwater, 4 p.m. at West Valley HS. The Greyhounds (20-3) finished the season No. 5 in the state's RPI system but jumped No. 3-ranked Tumwater to get a "home" game in Spokane on Saturday. Pullman's three first-team all-league selections — post Gavyn Dealy and guards Cade Rogers and Vaughn Holstad — all average better than 14 points per game.
2A: (13) West Valley vs. (12) Lakewood, 10 a.m. at Mount Vernon HS. The Eagles (15-7) fell victim to the bracket draw too, missing out on a local game by one seed for their loser-out game and instead being forced on a 342-mile one-way road trip. Point guard Nathan Zettle was league co-MVP and averaged 17 points per game and Noah Willard (17.3 ppg) is a dependable scorer.
Girls
4A: (5) Gonzaga Prep vs. (4) Woodinville, noon at North Creek HS. G-Prep's girls team suffered the same fate as the boys, missing on a local game this weekend by one seed in the bracket. Instead, the GSL champion Bullpups (21-1) — whose only loss this season was in the district championship game to Chiawana (24-0) — have to make the five-plus hour drive for a regional game.
G-Prep has five players who score more than nine points per game, led by junior point guard Aylah Cornwall (17.5 ppg), who was named league MVP and defensive player of the year.
4A: (12) Mead vs. (13) Tahoma, 10 a.m. at West Valley HS. The Panthers (18-5) are making their fifth straight trip to state, but are taking a different path this year, having already won two consecutive loser-out games in districts to reach the bracket. Unfortunately, they are still without leading scorers Addison Wells-Morrison (13.5 ppg) and Ellie Thornton (10.9 ppg) due to injury, so Mead will have to rely even more heavily on a suffocating defense and senior Caroline Spink (9.3 ppg).
3A: (3) Ridgeline vs. (6) Eastside Catholic, 2 p.m. at West Valley HS. The Falcons have been led by their two all-league leaders — senior post Madi Crowley (19.1 ppg) and junior point guard Grace Sheridan (18 ppg) — all season, an inside-outside combo as strong as any in the state. But down the stretch freshman Noelia Axton brought her offensive game up a notch and has become a dependable third option for coach Freddie Rehkow.
2A: (2) Deer Park vs. (7) Ellensburg, 8 p.m. at West Valley HS. The Stags (21-2) have finished second (in 1A) and third the last two years at state and would sure like to add that championship trophy to the case and send seniors Jacey Boesel (20.3 ppg) and Emma Bryant (13 ppg) off in style. Junior Ashlan Bryant (20.6) is a catalyst and after a grueling nonleague and GSL season they are battle tested.
2A: (4) Clarkston vs. (5) Archbishop Murphy, 2 p.m. at Cheney HS. The Bantams (20-3) were league champs via their late-season overtime win over Deer Park, before the Stags returned the favor in the district title game. Clarkston is deep, with five players averaging more than nine points per game.
Five local squads punched their tickets to the third round, including both Hoggard’s boys and girls programs. Each Vikings team will host an 8A East quarterfinal on Saturday, Feb. 28, with a trip to the regional finals on the line.
New Hanover’s boys protected their home floor in a rivalry matchup against North Brunswick, securing their third win over the Scorpions this winter.
Below is every Wilmington-area high school basketball Round 2 playoff score from Thursday, Feb. 26.
The Wildcats (19-7) shut down any thoughts of a historic playoff upset from their rivals across the bridge, leaning on a balance over flash. Ny'Zion Ballard poured in a game-high 17 points, while junior Dylan Fortun knocked down three 3-pointers on his way to 15.
New Hanover will host Garner in Round 3 on Saturday, a team it handled comfortably in a 79-51 win on Dec. 5, 2025.
"Once we just started holding onto the ball, it just clicked for us,” Fortun said. “We have some of the best fans in the county, but we can’t take Garner lightly. They really want to beat us.”
Garner, the No. 13 seed, earned the rematch by knocking off No. 4 Knightdale 69-60 on Thursday night. Saturday’s winner advances to the 7A East quarterfinals, scheduled for Tuesday, March 2.
Hoggard 63, Wakefield 42
The Vikings (21-6) are off to the quarterfinals of the NCHSAA 8A East bracket after cruising past No. 8 Wakefield at home Thursday. Hoggard will now host No. 12 Green Level on Saturday, Feb. 28, with a trip to a regional championship on the line.
Laney 49, Leesville Road 47
After trailing 32-25 at halftime, Laney (20-9) mounted a comeback that put the Bucs in the quarterfinals of the state playoffs for the first time in recent memory.
Laney will travel to No. 2 Apex Friendship on Saturday. A win could set up a potential regional championship rematch with Wilmington rival Hoggard.
West Brunswick 63, Terry Sanford 43
The No. 10 Trojans' (18-10) tremendous postseason continued in Round 2 thanks to a huge 27-point first-quarter showing over No. 7 Terry Sanford. West Brunswick will look for yet another upset in a Round 3 road matchup with No. 2 J.H. Rose Saturday.
More scores
Eastern Alamance 73, South Brunswick 63
Farmville Central 81, Trask 36
Girls
Hoggard 54, Green Level 42
The top-seeded Vikings (26-1) took a 24-8 halftime lead before cruising past No. 8 Green Level at home. The Vikings are back in a playoff quarterfinals for a third straight season and host No. 5 Wakefield, the team that eliminated them in last winter's 4A East regional final, at home Saturday.
NEW INVESTIGATION: Former LSU star and Bulls guard Antonio Blakeney is the unnamed "Co-Conspirator 1" in the NBA gambling scandal, according to law-enforcement officials — and he's still playing.
"This... is the real original sin — but he is continuing to exist under the radar." pic.twitter.com/YNlXo4PaVC
The Spartans snapped a seven-game losing streak at Mackey Arena, winning there for the first time since 2014.
Here's what I liked and disliked, and what the loss means.
What I liked in Purdue basketball's loss vs Michigan State
It was unclear how much Purdue could go to the offensive rebounding well against the national leader in defensive rebounding percentage. As it turns it, the offensive glass is why the Boilers led 39-36 at halftime. They scored nine second-chance points in the first half, with Gicarri Harris’ scrappy effort making an impact. Purdue extended that advantage into the second half, though it was mostly negated by MSU’s turnover conversions (below).
∎ Smith’s 1,000th career assist came in unique fashion, as Trey Kaufman-Renn's floater attempt was obstructed for a goaltending call. Smith was a catalyst in the opening minutes as Purdue jumped out to a 9-2 lead. Michigan State did a better job containing him after that, though he still collected 12 points and 10 assists. Kaufman-Renn's decision-making out of the paint was also crucial, and he tied a career high with seven assists.
∎ You won’t hear Mackey Arena much quieter on game day than it was during a pregame moment of silence for the late Rondale Moore. The former All-American wide receiver died last week at age 25. The first thing heard after the PA announcer broke the silence: Someone from deep in the Paint Crew shouting “We love you, Rondale!”
What I disliked in Purdue basketball's loss vs Michigan State
Purdue complicated an efficient shooting night with turnovers. More to the point, Michigan State capitalized on those turnovers – most of which were of the dead ball variety. Five first-half Boiler turnovers turned into 10 MSU points. By the under-eight timeout of the second half, when MSU led 64-61, it had scored 15 points off turnovers.
For the game, MSU's 19 points off turnovers accounted for over a quarter of their total. The Spartans really aren’t that talented offensively, and Purdue gave them too much help.
∎ Purdue struggled to contain Carson Cooper inside in the second half, and MSU used that advantage to pull ahead. He scored eight points in the first 12 minutes after halftime on three baskets and one trip to the line. The Spartans shot over 60% from the floor most of the second half largely by thriving in the paint or working off the break.
What Purdue basketball's loss vs Michigan State means
Coming into the season, Purdue seemed to have a major Big Ten schedule advantage by playing Illinois, Michigan and Michigan State once each — and all three at home. So much for that math. An inability to win any of those games cost the Boilers any chance of conference championship contention, and it may cost them on the NCAA tournament seed line as well.
The Spartans snapped a seven-game losing streak at Mackey Arena, winning there for the first time since 2014.
Here's what I liked and disliked, and what the loss means.
What I liked in Purdue basketball's loss vs Michigan State
It was unclear how much Purdue could go to the offensive rebounding well against the national leader in defensive rebounding percentage. As it turns it, the offensive glass is why the Boilers led 39-36 at halftime. They scored nine second-chance points in the first half, with Gicarri Harris’ scrappy effort making an impact. Purdue extended that advantage into the second half, though it was mostly negated by MSU’s turnover conversions (below).
∎ Smith’s 1,000th career assist came in unique fashion, as Trey Kaufman-Renn's floater attempt was obstructed for a goaltending call. Smith was a catalyst in the opening minutes as Purdue jumped out to a 9-2 lead. Michigan State did a better job containing him after that, though he still collected 12 points and 10 assists. Kaufman-Renn's decision-making out of the paint was also crucial, and he tied a career high with seven assists.
∎ You won’t hear Mackey Arena much quieter on game day than it was during a pregame moment of silence for the late Rondale Moore. The former All-American wide receiver died last week at age 25. The first thing heard after the PA announcer broke the silence: Someone from deep in the Paint Crew shouting “We love you, Rondale!”
What I disliked in Purdue basketball's loss vs Michigan State
Purdue complicated an efficient shooting night with turnovers. More to the point, Michigan State capitalized on those turnovers – most of which were of the dead ball variety. Five first-half Boiler turnovers turned into 10 MSU points. By the under-eight timeout of the second half, when MSU led 64-61, it had scored 15 points off turnovers.
For the game, MSU's 19 points off turnovers accounted for over a quarter of their total. The Spartans really aren’t that talented offensively, and Purdue gave them too much help.
∎ Purdue struggled to contain Carson Cooper inside in the second half, and MSU used that advantage to pull ahead. He scored eight points in the first 12 minutes after halftime on three baskets and one trip to the line. The Spartans shot over 60% from the floor most of the second half largely by thriving in the paint or working off the break.
What Purdue basketball's loss vs Michigan State means
Coming into the season, Purdue seemed to have a major Big Ten schedule advantage by playing Illinois, Michigan and Michigan State once each — and all three at home. So much for that math. An inability to win any of those games cost the Boilers any chance of conference championship contention, and it may cost them on the NCAA tournament seed line as well.
The Section 9 boys basketball tournament brackets were announced on Thursday, February 26.
The top seeds are Kingston (Class AAA); Goshen (Class AA); Beacon (Class A); James I. O'Neill (B); Mount Academy (C); and, Chapel Field (D) - the Lions are the only Class D team and are declared champions.
Sectional play begins Saturday, February 28, and concludes March 7.
The Class AAA and AA finals will be hosted by Monroe-Woodbury High School on March 7. Mount Saint Mary College in Newburgh has three title games: Class A on March 6; Class B on March 5 and Class C on March 4.
The latest New York sportswriters rankings: Class AAA - Honorable mention Kingston; Class AA - Honorable mention Goshen; Class A - No. 3 Beacon; No. 5 Red Hook; Honorable mention New Paltz; Saugerties; Spackenkill; Class B - No. 23 Onteora; Class C - No. 23 Mount Academy; Honorable mention Rockland; Class D - None.
WEST LAFAYETTE, IN − It had everything that a marquee matchup in primetime should.
Big shots. Thunderous dunks. Smothering defense. A whole lot of physicality. And the high-energy intensity that has defined the high-stakes rivalry between Purdue and Michigan State basketball.
In the end, the eighth-ranked Boilermakers got the ball to their star. Just like they should have.
In the end, reigning Big Ten Player of the Year Braden Smith fired a 3-pointer as Coen Carr leaped and waved both arms in his face.
In the end, the ball banged off the backboard and rim, and Carr elevated to secure the rebound and a thrilling 76-74 victory for the 13th-ranked Spartans on Thursday, Feb. 26.
The win is Michigan State's first at Mackey Arena since Feb. 20, 2014, ending a streak of seven straight losses for the Spartans in West Lafayette.
Carson Cooper scored 15 points with six rebounds as seven MSU players each scored eight or more points. Kur Teng score eight of his 13 points in the second half and drilled three 3-pointers, while Jeremy Fears Jr. finished with 12 points and six assists.
Carr finished with 11 points, five rebounds and the defensive stop in a game filled with them. Smith scored 12 points with 10 assists but was just 4-for-10 shooting.
Oscar Cluff scored 10 first-half points but was scoreless in the second half. Jack Benter had 11 points off the bench as Purdue went 12-for-25 from 3-point range.
The Spartans, after struggling early in the game down low, outscored the Boilers in the paint, 40-32. Jaxon Kohler had eight points but on just 3-for-10 shooting, but MSU shot 52.7% from the field.
Big Ten postseason picture
The Spartans (23-5, 13-4 Big Ten) broke a tie with the Boilermakers in the race for the final triple-bye spot in the Big Ten. The win actually moved MSU into a three-way tie with Nebraska and Illinois for second place in the Big Ten, with the Illini facing Michigan on Friday night and the Cornhuskers taking on USC in LA on Saturday.
Impactful start
It looked early like another repeat slow start for MSU, particularly as Cluff dominated Jaxon Kohler inside during a 9-0 Purdue run after Cooper’s hook shot opened the game. Cluff had eight of the Boilermakers’ first 13 points in less than five minutes of game time.
Slowly, though, the Spartans steadied their scoring and stabilized their defense. It was sparked by a four-point play by Fears, who drilled a deep 3-pointer at the top of the key while getting run over by Purdue sophomore Gicarri Harris. That sparked an 8-0 MSU answer, in which Cooper and Ward asserted themselves on the block. Ward’s putback dunk off a blocked Kur Teng shot made it 16-13 and set the tone for the rim-rocking to come.
As the two teams traded big deep shots, Carr delivered an emphatic two-handed dunk through Purdue’s Daniel Jacobsen off a drive-and-dish from Fears. Jacobsen answered at the other end by finishing a flush through a foul. Then back the other way, Cooper posted up Jacobsen and spun around him for a tomahawk jam through a foul and finished the three-point play.
With Ward joining Cooper and Kohler in holding Cluff to just one more field goal over the final 16 minutes and 10 points for the half. Purdue went into the break leading 39-36, with both teams shooting the lights out. Seven of the eight MSU players who saw first-half action scored, with Cooper and Carr each scoring seven and Ward six as the Spartans shot 48.3% after the slow start. However, Purdue was 6-of-11 from 3-point range and shot a blistering 53.6%.
Back-and-forth
The second half provided some more surprising heros.
MSU opened the second half with a 10-4 scoring edge in the paint and a 6-0 fastbreak advantage in the first 5:23 of the second half. Cooper continued to make his presence felt at both ends of the floor, confounding Cluff and hitting short jumpers over the Purdue post player.
Purdue took advantage of a Teng-Denham Wojcik combo out of a media timeout and scored five straight points to reclaim the lead. But MSU countered with an 11-4 burst that stunned the boisterous Mackey backers.
Fears checked back in on a pair of free throws from Teng, who then drained a 3-pointer off an extra swing pass from Kohler. After a pair of Cooper free throws, the senior captain kicked a pass out to Teng for another 3. Then at the other end, Teng plucked a steal and flipped it to Carr for a windmill breakaway dunk. The lead was 64-59 with 8:25 remaining.
The Boilermakers wouldn’t go away, though they went more than four minutes without a field goal and got within two on a pair of Smith free throws. But MSU took advantage of that shooting drought, with Fears driving and dishing to Ward for a dunk, Scott hitting a pair of free throws, then Fears knifing through the paint and finishing with a layup. Purdue coach Matt Painter called timeout with 4:05 remaining and MSU’s lead swelled to eight, 72-64.
It worked. The Boilers answered with an 8-2 burst, with five straight points from Smith on a 3-pointer and a driving layup. Izzo called timeout with 2:09 to play, lighting into his team’s defensive lapses.
Kohler hit a one-handed post-up out of the timeout. Then after a driving bucket by Benter, Kohler missed two 3-point attempts on the same possession. Benter clanged one at the other end, and Teng elevated for a critical defensive rebound and MSU called another timeout with 46.9 to go.
A shot clock violation ensued after offensive discombobulation and Carr’s desperation attempt in traffic smacking off the backboard. Painter called timeout with 25.1 seconds to play.
The ball found its way in to Kaufman-Renn. Cooper elevated with him and forced the miss. Ward rebounded and was fouled, then missed the front end of the one-and-one with 8.2 seconds left. Purdue pushed it and called timeout again just over midcourt, with 3.4 seconds left, setting up the final shot by Smith.
MSU committed just six turnovers. Though the Spartans forced the Boilers into just nine turnovers, they turned those into 19 points.
Next up for MSU basketball
MSU planned to return to East Lansing after the game but will turn right back around for Indiana in Bloomington on Sunday (3:45 p.m.,CBS). It is the first repeat play of the season for the Spartans, who defeated the Hoosiers, 81-60, on Jan. 13 at Breslin Center. MSU already has played all three of its final scheduled opponents, hosting Rutgers on Tuesday and wrapping up the regular season at U-M on March 8.
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WEST LAFAYETTE, IN − Jeremy Fears Jr., Kur Teng and Carson Cooper combined for 24 points in the second half as No. 13 Michigan State basketball rallied from a halftime deficit to knock off No. 8 Purdue, 76-74, at Mackey Arena.
Boilermakers point guard Braden Smith handed out a historic assist, but it was his counterpart in green and white who got the last laugh. Fears supplied 12 points and six assists, Cooper added a team-high 15 points and Teng came off the bench for 13 points.
The win is Michigan State's first at Mackey Arena since Feb. 20, 2014, ending a streak of seven straight losses for the Spartans in West Lafayette.
Big Ten postseason picture
The Spartans (23-5, 13-4 Big Ten) broke a tie with the Boilermakers in the race for the final triple-bye spot in the Big Ten. The win actually moved MSU into a three-way tie with Nebraska and Illinois for second place in the Big Ten, with the Illini facing Michigan on Friday night and the Cornhuskers taking on USC in LA on Saturday.
At the half
This one was about as equal as possible through 20 minutes, aside from a three-point Purdue lead. Points in the paint were tied, 18-18, while the Boilermakers had a slight edge in rebounds, 15-12. The Spartans got 10 points off five Boilermaker turnovers, while Purdue took advantage of hot hands beyond the arc – 6-for-11 on 3s, compared to just 3-for-9 for the Spartans.
In the box score, it was Coen Carr and Cooper leading the Spartans with seven points apiece, while Jaxon Kohler and Teng each had five. Fears added just four points, but dished out four assists in a team-high 17 minutes.
Speaking of assists, Purdue's Braden Smith picked up career helper No. 1,000 before the break, making him just the fifth Division I player with that many. (The others? LIU’s Jason Brickman, North Carolina’s Ed Cota, N.C. State’s Chris Corchiani and Duke’s Bobby Hurley.) The historic assist was part of a seven-assist, three-rebound half. He had just two points, though, on 1-for-3 shooting (with both misses on 3-point tries). Oscar Cluff led the Boilermakers with 10 points, though only two of those came in the final 15 minutes of the first half, after he outscored the Spartans by himself, 8-6, as part of a 13-6 start for Purdue.
Next up for MSU basketball
The Spartans will stick around in the Hoosier State for another game, heading to Bloomington, Indiana, for an afternoon matchup with Indiana on Sunday (3:45 p.m., CBS). The Hoosiers have lost three straight and are sliding toward single-bye territory. But they’re 13-3 at Assembly Hall this season, their first under former West Virginia and Drake coach Darian DeVries.
The Bengals would like Joe Flacco back, but he’s going to take his time exploring free agency for any possible starting jobs around the NFL. Jake Browning is a non-starter of a conversation at this point as a restricted free agent.
Dalton, though, is available through trade from the Carolina Panthers, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.
The former Bengals quarterback would certainly fit what offensive coordinator Dan Pitcher talked about this week during the NFL combine about the backup role these days, per Geoff Hobson of Bengals.com:
"The backup quarterback is a unique job, and an understanding of what that is, is important. Because you have to have a guy that's very intrinsically motivated, somebody that can just go to work and do the work day in and day out because they know it's the right thing to do, and because they can get themselves to a place mentally where, 'I might have to play at any given moment, but I also may not play all year.' And that's different than any other position in the building."
The Bengals will have plenty of veteran options in free agency, as opposed to trading resources to go get Dalton.
But there’s the obvious appeal with Dalton: He’s been in the building plenty. If both parties could overlook the whole benching Andy Dalton on his birthday thing and how things overall ended, it could work. He's only a $5.8 million cap hit in 2026.
Considering Dalton remains one of the NFL’s best backups, it certainly makes some level of sense.
"There are levels to this" is a saying that gets thrown around often when discussing the fight game, but hearing Alexander Volkanovski break down why he was able beat Diego Lopes a second time proves he truly does operate on a higher plane than his peers.
Volkanovski (28-4 MMA, 15-3 UFC) learned a lot from his first meeting with Lopes (27-8 MMA, 6-3 UFC) at UFC 314. Particularly, the champ's team identified a discrepancy in footwork, which allowed him to dictate the fight and win a unanimous decision.
When the rematch was announced for UFC 325, Volkanovski and his team knew Lopes would not have enough time to shore up the holes in his footwork game, especially when it came to his ability, or lack thereof, to cut off the cage effectively – a strategy to prevent an opponent from easily circling out of danger, especially along the fenceline.
"During camp, we were thinking surely his team were gonna be like, 'Oh, we need to learn to cut off. We're gonna cut him off going this way,'" Volkanovski told Demetrious Johnson in an interview on his YouTube channel. "He has to at least do that, right? But I was even saying leading up, I go, I don't know, even just cutting off – some people, yeah, you'll cut him off, but some people can do it wrong.
"Like if he cuts off too close, I can just run him into big shots. Let's see what he does anyway. But obviously, we're prepared to go the other way. We'll be prepared to go both ways if we have to. I wasn't thinking that I'd able to go one way the whole time. I thought he would do a better job of, no matter which way I went, probably, eventually cutting me off."
True to Volkanovski's thinking, Lopes initially proved he worked on cutting off the cage. However, once Volkanovski identified what Lopes was doing, he adjusted accordingly – and that's what Lopes wasn't prepared for. The champ knew he was still a few steps ahead of Lopes, so it was just about being patient and waiting for his opportunities to open up.
"I didn't have to take too much risks," Volkanovski said. "I would just keep turning until he wanted to do something, and I'd make him pay. He's good, but maybe he just needs that little bit more IQ or footwork, and get a better understanding. That's why that quick turnaround, it was always going to be difficult for him. That's why when people were like, 'Oh, he's going to cut off.' Yeah, but is he going to do it properly?"
The title rematch also went the full 25 minutes, but it was clear Volkanovski was in full control. Only two of the official judges found a round to score for Lopes, while the third scored each frame for the champ. The story of the fight was the footwork game that Lopes couldn't figure out. Volkanovski was able to move freely, sticking and moving, leaving Lopes with more questions than answers.
While breaking down what separates them, Volkanovski said he's not sure that anyone else in the division could make Lopes look like that. In the champ's eyes, Lopes' ability to take over a fight is effective against everyone except himself.
"Even if he started cutting me off the other way, I still had so many other layers I could have went," Volkanovski said. "How's he gonna be prepared for all those layers? I was able to stump him on just that next layer, and just me turning the opposite way – and I'm not having a shot at him. It's just something that he will learn.
"I feel sorry for him in a sense, really, to be honest. I don't know if anyone would be able to do that to him, in a sense. Can someone stick to a gamplean like that? ... I was thinking, the guy had to fight me twice. Most other people are going to end up fighting his fight. They may not have a choice, because they probably don't know how to work him around the octagon like I can for 25 minutes."
Sheyanne Law of Averill Park takes a shot in front of Madi Montrym of Schalmont during the section 2 Class A quarterfinal game at Albany Academy in Albany, NY on Thursday, February 26, 2026. Stephen Weaver/For the Times Union (Stephen Weaver)
ALBANY - The expectation level outside of the Averill Park girls' basketball program on how its varsity team would fare this season was likely to be as low as it has been since the Golden Knights captured state and Federation titles in 2010. Since this season's squad graduated many players and does not currently have a scholarship-level player on its roster, doubts about how well it could perform were not outlandish.
Inside the program, the hunger to win sectional championships remains. Veteran coach Sean Organ demands defensive tenacity every time his squad takes the court, and Thursday evening, the Golden Knights delivered a virtuoso defensive performance.
Schalmont struggled to even get a shot up during the opening eight minutes when Averill Park harried the Sabres into miscue after miscue. By the time the final buzzer sounded, fourth-seeded Averill Park had earned a 46-29 Class A quarterfinal victory over Schalmont. The Sabres finished with more turnovers (30) than points scored.
"When you have a younger team, which is either our second-youngest or youngest team we've ever had in 21 years coaching, you know that offense comes with chemistry and rhythm. We are behind in that aspect, but we know we can get and defend teams," said Organ, who has led Averill Park to 15 sectional titles and two championships since the 2005-06 season. "Defend is what we did tonight."
Reese Ahern of Averill Park fights for loose ball with Milania Tebano of Schalmont during the section 2 Class A quarterfinal game at Albany Academy in Albany, NY on Thursday, February 26, 2026. Stephen Weaver/For the Times Union (Stephen Weaver)
Not only did Averill Park (10-12) force 30 turnovers, but it also limited the Sabres to 8-for-32 shooting (25 percent) from the field.
During its incredible run of success, Averill Park has often had a defensive lockdown specialist. That role this season is occupied by sophomore guard Sheyanne Law. Her main responsibility was to chase around and bother Schalmont's leading scorer, Arianna Brandon. The senior was limited to 10 points on 2 of 7 shooting from the field.
"She has done a phenomenal job with that this season when she has been healthy," Organ said of Law. "As a team, we have struggled with health this season. At times, she has really shone defensively."
"I am proud, but it was an all-team effort. I think we all did well together defensively," Law said.
Despite its superlative defensive start, Averill Park only led 10-7 after one quarter. The lead increased to 27-16 by intermission and ballooned to 38-25 when Anna Cronin hit a 3-pointer to end the third quarter.
"We have progressed a lot throughout the season," Organ said. "Probably from the middle of January on, we've made a lot of growth on offense and doing things better defensively. We have a long way to go, but for this young team to get back to Hudson Valley as young as they are, I will take it."
Addison Alvey of Averill Park drives to the basket in front of Madi Montrym of Schalmont during the section 2 Class A quarterfinal game at Albany Academy in Albany, NY on Thursday, February 26, 2026. Stephen Weaver/For the Times Union (Stephen Weaver)
Key moment
Over the course of its first 14 possessions of the first quarter, Schalmont made one of four shots and turned the ball over 11 times against Averill Park's press.
"We wanted to hold them down more, but we played pretty well on defense," Law said.
Star of the game
On an evening that the Golden Knights displayed offensive balance, junior guard Anna Cronin scored points in all four quarters and finished with a game-high 12 points. She also added six steals.
Madi Montrym of Schalmont blocks the shot of Averill Park's Addison Alvey during the section 2 Class A quarterfinal game at Albany Academy in Albany, NY on Thursday, February 26, 2026. Stephen Weaver/For the Times Union (Stephen Weaver)
Numbers to know
22: The combined points scored by Schalmont's Sandra Cirilla and Arianna Brandon.
11: Turnovers Schalmont committed in the first quarter. The Sabres finished with 30 turnovers overall.
6: Players Averill Park needed to amass its 46 points. Junior guard Anna Cronin led the way with 12 points, followed by senior forward Aubrey Wilson (nine points, nine rebounds and four assists), freshman guard Reese Ahern (nine points), eighth-grade guard Keira Organ (six points), sophomore guard Shenanne Law (six points each) and senior forward Addison Alvey (four points).
What's next
Schalmont:The Sabres finished up their 2025-26 campaign with a 12-10 record.
Averill Park: The Golden Knights return to what the program refers to as their second home, Hudson Valley Community College, for semifinal play Tuesday against top-seeded Albany Academy.
Carver-Hawkeye Arena is one of the loudest women's college basketball venues in the entire country. But that sold-out crowd fell quiet early during Thursday's game between Iowa and Illinois.
After diving on the court for a loose ball, Hawkeye senior forward Hannah Stuelke remained down in some pain. She had an awkward collision with an Illini player on the floor, with her elbow rolled up. After a short time down on the court, Stuelke immediately went to the Iowa locker room, holding that elbow. Freshman forward Journey Houston entered the game for her.
Iowa fans held their breath as they watched one of their star forwards leave the court with an injury in her last regular-season home game. The mood changed quickly when Stuelke re-emerged from the locker room and immediately went to the scorers' table to check back in, with a compression sleeve on her arm.
Hannah Stuelke back and ready to check in with a compression sleeve on her right arm.
Seeing Stuelke seemingly avoid a major injury and return to the game is great news for an Iowa team that has visions of making a deep run in March. She's by far the most seasoned and experienced Hawk when it comes to postseason success, having a pair of National Championship game appearances under her belt.
The Hawkeyes will go as far as she and Ava Heiden can take them, and they need both of those players healthy for the stretch run. It's great to see the stud senior forward back on the court.
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 Zach on X: @zach_hiney
DELAND — Freshman Cooper Ball hollered “Chas,” from the right flank as sophomore Chas Smith centered a pass about 10 yards atop the penalty arc late in the first half. Smith heard his teammate and sent a perfect pass in Ball’s direction and he drilled it into the back of the net from just inside the right corner of the penalty area.
It was the only goal Bishop Moore would need, although senior Miguel Valencia scored with 48 seconds left, as the Hornets moved on to Saturday’s championship match with a 2-0 victory over Naples at Spec Martin Stadium on Thursday night.
“We’re possession at heart, so we’re always moving the ball,” said Ball. “Our philosophy is that we’re gonna keep the ball and the other team is gonna tire out.”
Ball, a confident freshman, came off the field at halftime saying, “That’s what I do.” He laughed when it was mentioned after the game.
“That’s my goal. I always want to get on the scoresheet and it always feels good, gives me some extra confidence to play the rest of the game through,” Ball said. “But it’s all the team. It’s 11 men, not one.”
The first-half scoring play was indicative of the deliberate passing attack engineered by Bishop Moore, and head coach Tom Hage lauded his two youngsters Ball and Smith.
“The first goal by Cooper Ball was phenomenal and Chas put the ball in play. The composure of a freshman and a sophomore to combine to score in the state final four was critical right before the end of the first half,” Hage said.
Hage also credited assistant coach Craig Stephens for orchestrating the offense.
“This is all Craig Stephens’ mindset and he is beyond wiser than his years,” Hage said. “That’s all his plan of attack and they followed it to a T and I’m really happy for him.”
The team is hoping to make Hage happy on Saturday. The Bishop Moore coach has been snake-bitten in the final four over the past six seasons, but perhaps this could be the one — his first state title in 19 seasons at the helm.
The Hornets, who are making their seventh-straight final-four appearance, will take on Plantation American Heritage at 1 p.m., Saturday. It is Bishop Moore’s third state championship-game appearance in the past four seasons.
“Yeah, it goes without saying,” Hage said of his hope to finally win the big one. “I try not to complain because there are so many Orlando teams that don’t get the chance to get to the finals, so when we get there, we’re super happy.
“Whatever God has planned for us, we’ll have to deal with it. We’ll do our best and hope to break this string of not being able to win since 2001.”
The team is well aware of Hage’s yearning to finally win a state championship.
“This will be the one,” Ball said. “He wants to retire so bad that I think it’s about time.”
But is the rally cry to “Win One for Hage.”
“We’re playing for the brother on the left and the brother on the right,” Ball said.
Drake women's basketball won an 87-85 thriller on Feb. 26 at Evansville.
Anna Becker scored with 11 seconds left to give Drake a two-point lead. The Aces missed a jumper in the final seconds as the Bulldogs held on.
Drake is 9-18 overall and 8-9 in the Missouri Valley Conference. Evansville is 7-21 and 5-12.
Abbie Aalsma led Drake with 24 points. Ava Hawthorne added 18, and Becker scored 17. Drake had a 40-30 rebounding advantage, including 18 offensive boards.
Evansville's Camryn Runner finished with 36 points to lead all scorers.
The Bulldogs play at Southern Illinois on Feb. 28.
The first day of the NFL Combine was a resounding success for the five Texas A&M defensive standouts, who showcased their skills for league scouts in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Defensive lineman Albert Regis was the topic of conversation from the unit that performed on Thursday, as he delivered an explosive performance on Day 1. He displayed his elite athleticism and high motor with a 4.88 40-yard dash and 9'8" broad jump. Regis' four-bag and wave drills displayed what he looks to bring from Bryan-College Station to Sundays.
Highly-touted defensive end Cashius Howell also put on a show while representing the Aggies in Indianapolis, as he notched a 4.59 40-yard dash and recorded the fourth-best 10-yard split of 1.58 seconds. According to multiple reports, the projected first-rounder has sparked much interest from the New England Patriots, who are fresh off an appearance in Super Bowl LX.
Texas A&M defensive lineman Tyler Onyedim also competed in multiple events on Thursday, which included showcasing his 32.00" vertical and 9'3" broad jump. While linebacker Scooby Williams did not participate in any of the events, Taurean York secured a 7.32-second time on the three-cone drill and 4.48 on the 20-yard shuttle.
Here are the full statistics and physical attributes from the Aggies who participated in events on the first day of the 2026 NFL Combine:
DL, Albert Regis
Height: 6-1
Weight: 295 pounds
Hand: 9 5/8
Arm: 31 5/8
40-yard dash: 4.88 seconds
10-yard split: 1.72 seconds
Vertical: 34.00"
Broad jump: 9'8"
20-yard shuttle: 4.85 seconds
DL, Tyler Onyedim
Height: 6-3 1/2
Weight: 292 pounds
Hand: 10 1/8
Arm: 34 1/8
Vertical: 32.00"
Broad jump: 9'3"
DE, Cashius Howell
Height: 6-2 1/2
Weight: 253 pounds
Hand: 9 1/4
Arm: 30 1/4
Wingspan: 74 1/4
40-yard dash: 4.59 seconds
10-yard split: 1.58 seconds
Vertical: 32.50"
Broad jump: 9'7"
LB, Taurean York
Height: 5-11
Weight: 226 pounds
Hand: 8 3/8
Arm: 30
3-cone drill: 7.23 seconds
20-yard shuttle: 4.48 seconds
LB, Scooby Williams
Height: 6-2
Weight: 231 pounds
Hand: 9 1/4
Arm: 32
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 Dylan on X: @dylanmflippo.
Michigan football's Jaishawn Barham isn't your average edge rusher-outside linebacker. The hybrid player has shown freakish athleticism that allows him to play both in the middle of the defense as well as up front.
On Thursday, he had his turn at the NFL scouting combine, running the 40-yard dash, and in doing so, Barham finished seventh among all of the edge rusher group, having posted a 4.64-second time. He is behind some other notable players, including rival and projected first-round pick Arvell Reese from Ohio State, who had the fastest time at 4.46 seconds.
Even so, Barham is in the upper group of the edge rushers who participated in the run.
Barham also finished fifth in the 10-yard split (1.61 seconds), was seventh with a 10-foot 3-inch broad jump, but had the fourth-worst vertical jump at 33 inches.
If you combine linebackers, defensive tackles, and edge rushers, Barham's 40-yard dash was 19th fastest among 47 participants -- but would have had the worst time of all the linebackers and best time of all the defensive tackles.
Kansas City Chiefs general manager Brett Veach will have some difficult decisions to make when the NFL's legal tampering window for free agency opens on March 9.
Among the players Veach may have the option to sign is former Pittsburgh Steelers and Dallas Cowboys wide receiver George Pickens.
Should Veach seriously consider picking up Pickens next month?
Here's a look at what Pickens might cost Kansas City next season:
George Pickens 2025 salary
Pickens played on the franchise tag last season. According to OverTheCap.com, he earned a fully guaranteed base salary of $28,824,000.
How much money will George Pickens make on his next contract?
The experts at Spotrac.com estimate that the market value of Pickens' next contract would be a deal that pays the mercurial wide receiver $122,425,436 over four years.
Should Kansas City sign George Pickens in free agency?
While the Chiefs would benefit from Pickens' presence in Andy Reid's offense, Kansas City may have a hard time affording the high-dollar contract that the former Georgia Bulldog will command in free agency.
Thursday's edition of MMA Junkie Radio with "Gorgeous" George and "Goze" is here.
On Episode 3,646, the fellas welcome in a pair of guest fighters: Joselyne Edwards and Julian Erosa. The guys also discuss the upcoming card in Mexico City, UFC Fight Night 268, and also recap the latest news in the world of MMA.
The Golden State Warriors have had over 600 players don the more than 60 jersey numbers used by their players over the more than 75 years of existence the team has enjoyed in its rich and storied history.
Founded in 1946 during the Basketball Association of America (BAA – a precursor league of the NBA) era, the team has called home the cities of Philadelphia, San Francisco, Oakland, and even San Diego.
To commemorate the players who wore those numbers, Warriors Wire is covering the entire history of jersey numbers and the players who sported them since the founding of the team. For this article, we begin with the first of two players who wore the No. 47 jersey for the Warriors.
That player would be Golden State forward alum Dave Lattin. After ending his college career at Texas-El Paso, Lattin was picked up with the 11th overall selection of the 1967 NBA Draft by the (then) San Francisco (now, Golden State) Warriors.
The Houston, Texas native played the first season of his pro career with the Dubs before he was drafted by the Phoenix Suns in the 1968 NBA expansion draft.
During his time suiting up for the Warriors, Lattin wore only jersey No. 47 and put up 2.2 points and 2.4 rebounds per game.
All stats and data courtesy of Basketball Reference.
The Brooklyn Nets have 52 jersey numbers worn by over 600 different players over the course of their history since the franchise was founded in 1967 as a charter member of the American Basketball Association (ABA), when the team was known as the "New Jersey Americans".
Since then, that league has been absorbed by the NBA with the team that would later become the New York Nets and New Jersey Nets before settling on the name by which they are known today, bringing their rich player and jersey history with them to the league of today.
To commemorate the players who played for the Nets over the decades wearing those 52 different jersey numbers, Nets Wire is covering the entire history of the franchise's jersey numbers and the players who sported them since the founding of the team.
And for today's article, we will continue with the fifth of 21 people to wear the No. 44 jersey, wing alum Ralph Simpson. After ending his college career at Michigan State, Simpson was picked up with the 11th overall selection of the 1972 NBA Draft by the Chicago Bulls.
The Detroit, Michigan native played the first six seasons of his pro career with the ABA's (defunct) Denver Rockets and Denver Nuggets before he was dealt to the Detroit Pistons in 1976. He also played for the Nuggets again and the Philadelphia 76ers before he was dealt to the (then) New Jersey (now, Brooklyn) Nets in 1979 for the final two seasons of his NBA career,
During his time suiting up for the Nets, Simpson wore only jersey No. 44 and put up 6.6 points, 1.8 rebounds, and 2.1 assists per game.
All stats and data courtesy of Basketball Reference.
The annual NFLPA report cards had an obstacle this offseason, as the NFL won a grievance that forbids the NFLPA from publishing the results. However, the results still made it public on Thursday, as media outlets obtained the results of the player surveys that were distributed to the 32 NFL teams.
ESPN obtained the results of the survey and team grades. While the Cardinals didn't come in last place this year, they only moved up one spot — to No. 31.
The Pittsburgh Steelers took over the league cellar. The Miami Dolphins were No. 1.
Comparatively, in the NFC West, the other team were much more highly ranked.
The Seattle Seahawks came in at No. 4. The San Francisco 49ers were No. 14 and the LA Rams were No. 19.
Report card grades for the Cardinals
The main problems for the Cardinals are how the players perceive the facilities, the way families are treated and owner Michael Bidwill.
The players gave Cardinals ownership an F. It is based on whether the players perceive ownership as being willing to invest in players and facilities. This grade is especially notable because the team announced a new training facility. Even with that investment, players still don't view Bidwill positively.
The locker room got an F-minus. The training room got a D-plus. The weight room got a D-plus. Treatment of family was graded D-plus.
Compared to 2025, the ownership grade went down from a D-minus.
The treament of family had the same grade. The weight room went up from an F. The training room went up from a D-minus.
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 Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.
The UConn women’s basketball team gave up just two field goals in the second quarter of Thursday’s win over Georgetown at PeoplesBank Arena, but that didn’t stop coach Geno Auriemma from hollering furiously at star guard Azzi Fudd when she came a step slow on a defensive closeout that allowed the Hoyas their only 3-pointer.
Fudd heard the Huskies coach’s blustering and immediately silenced him, draining her fourth shot of the first half from beyond the arc seconds after Georgetown’s make. Her 3-pointer launched an 11-0 UConn run to send the team into halftime leading by 23.
Behind the dominant second quarter, the No. 1 Huskies went on to rout the Hoyas 84-52 to improve to 30-0 this season and 19-0 in Big East play. The victory broke a program record for most conference wins in a single season, and it also tied UConn for the sixth-longest winning streak in women’s basketball history with 46 in a row. The program has now won at least 30 games in each of the last five seasons and 29 times in its history.
As they have in nearly all of the Huskies’ wins this season, Fudd and All-American sophomore Sarah Strong dominated. Fudd put up 24 points on six made 3-pointers, the most she’s hit in a game since dropping seven against Michigan on Nov. 21. Despite the missed closeout, Fudd also led UConn defensively with four steals on top of four assists and five rebounds.
Strong posted her eighth double-double of the season with 13 points and 11 rebounds in just 23 minutes, and she approached a triple-double with a team-high seven assists. Freshman Blanca Quinonez also scored in double-digits for the first time since returning from a shoulder injury that sidelined her for six games, finishing with 10 points plus four steals and a pair of assists.
Georgetown let Fudd get hot early, allowing her too much space beyond the arc on back-to-back possessions that she connected on in the first two minutes of the game. The star guard hit three shots from the perimeter in the opening quarter, accounting for 13 of the Huskies’ 21 points.
The Hoyas kept the game within striking distance, trailing UConn by a single point at the end of the first behind a 4-for-7 start from 3-point range. The Huskies had trouble finding offensive rhythm outside of Fudd’s shooting until Quinonez checked in and immediately ended the team’s three-minute scoring drought with a steal that she dished to junior guard Ashlynn Shade for an open layup.
After a quiet first quarter, Strong took over early in the second. She started the quarter on a solo 10-0 run over less than three minutes, shooting 4-for-5 from the field during that stretch. The Huskies also began to lock down on the perimeter defensively and held Georgetown to just 1-for-8 in the second quarter. The team never looked back after Strong’s run, outscoring the Hoyas 23-5 in the second with 12 points coming off eight Georgetown turnovers.
The rest of the Huskies got more involved out of halftime, opening on another 13-0 run without any points from Fudd or Strong. Senior center Serah Williams, who played just four minutes in the first half, put up five straight points to start the third quarter, and Shade added another five in a row to keep the momentum rolling.
Shade finished with 12 points, leading UConn with eight in the second half. Sophomore guard Kayleigh Heckel became the fifth player in double digits when she knocked down a 3-pointer in the fourth, putting up 11 points shooting 100% from the field and snagging three steals.
The Huskies continued to smother Georgetown defensively down the stretch, ending with 26 points off 23 forced turnovers and holding it to 32% shooting from the field. The Hoyas made just three shots from 3-point range after the first quarter, ending the game 7-for-28 from deep.
The NFLPA were told by the NFL they were no longer allowed to release their annual team report cards to the public. But that's not to say the report cards couldn't be leaked to the press by an unknown source who them makes them public, right? That's exactly what happened with year when ESPN reporter Kalyn Kahler. She got the golden ticket, as it were and leaked all of the report to the public and we thank her for her service.
We've already talked about how the Steelers came in dead last among all 32 teams but we want to focus on three areas that really show a lack of respect or the players given these grades are nothing new.
The F- for the locker room and home field are nothing new and grossly disappointing. The team's relationship with the University of Pittsburgh, paired with ownership stuck in the 1970s creates an environment few free agents will want to come play in. You add in an F for treatment of families, and it's a shock that any players want to be in Pittsburgh.
We've always assumed the lure of playing for former head coach Mike Tomlin helped players ignore just how bad things are with this team from a facilities standpoint. With Tomlin gone and the Rooney family unwilling to make any updates to the lockers and field, we highly doubt new head coach Mike McCarthy will have the same reputation and be able to repeat that success.
Simeon Birnbaum and Silan Ayyildiz won 5,000-meter titles Feb. 26 and the Oregon men and women are both at the top of the team standings after the opening day of the Big Ten Indoor Track & Field Championships at the Indiana Farm Bureau Fall Creek Pavilion in Indianapolis.
Ayyildiz repeated as the conference indoor champion in the women's 5,000, while Birnbaum made it two wins in a row at Big Ten championship meets after claiming the conference outdoor title in the men's 5,000 in May.
Both runners finished first in races that featured dominant efforts by Oregon's entries.
In the women’s final, Ayyildiz led a 1-2-3 finish for the Ducks for the second straight season.
She crossed in a personal-record 15 minutes, 37.9 seconds and was followed closely by teammates Diana Cherotich (15:39.45) and Juliet Cherubet (15:42.39) as Oregon scored 24 points.
Freshman Liisa-Maria Lusti added five points to the Ducks’ team total with her fourth-place finish in the pentathlon with 4,252 points.
The Oregon women, who won the distance medley relay title last season, finished in sixth place to get the Ducks three points.
The team of Samantha McDonnell, Lakely Doht-Barron, Allura Markow and Wilma Nielsen ran 10:59.74, more than three seconds behind Washington, which won in a meet-record 10:56.18.
That result moved the Ducks and Huskies into a tie for the lead in the team standings with 32 points each. Illinois is close behind with 24.
In the men’s 5,000, Birnbaum finished in 13:45.78 after a final-lap kick separated him from teammate and 2025 champion Connor Burns, who was second in 13:48.15 but later disqualified for interference.
With Burns’ DQ, everyone but Birnbaum moved up a spot in the final standings. Abdel Laadjel was fourth for the Ducks in 13:51.74, Benjamin Balazs fifth in 13:56.44, and Evan Bishop seventh in 13:59.95 as Oregon scored 21 points.
Oregon added eight more points with a second-place finish in a drama-filled DMR. Tomas Palfrey fell halfway through his opening leg and then was knocked down again as he tried to regain his footing. Fuad Omer and Cain Evans helped keep the Ducks in the race over the next two legs then Elliott Cook polished it off with a strong final 1,600 to get Oregon across the line in 9:38.85. Michigan won in 9:38.72.
The Ducks ended the day with 29 points. Wisconsin is second with 13 and Michigan third with 11.
Also for the men Thursday, Matthew Erickson qualified for Saturday’s final of the men’s 600. The reigning conference 800 champion ran a PR 1:16.52 to finish third in his preliminary heat and seventh overall to advance on time.
The meet will resume Friday.
Chris Hansen covers University of Oregon football, men’s basketball, track and field, cross country and softball for The Register-Guard. You can reach him at chansen@registerguard.com.
For a good portion of non-conference play, North Carolina endured life without senior captain Seth Trimble. The Tar Heels continue trotting towards postseason play without superstar Caleb Wilson, who hopes to be back against Duke, while star center Henri Veesaar missed a couple games with an achilles injury.
Despite all that, UNC is managing just fine with injuries throughout the year. North Carolina's trio previously missed a combined 15 games, but a 22-6 record is pretty good to show for those ailments.
Davis is calling on guys like Zayden High and Jarin Stevenson to step up, while giving Derek Dixon the keys to North Carolina's offense. All three of those moves are paying off.
High is a post weapon whom Davis is giving plenty additional minutes, particularly as Davis fine-tunes the Tar Heels' rotations with postseason play rapidly approaching. High is rewarding UNC with starter-level production, highlighted by a double-double against the Wolfpack (19-9, 10-5 ACC).
Stevenson, flipping between North Carolina's starting lineup and bench for most of the season, can plug and play anywhere. Need a quick three? Call on Stevenson. Need someone to create a size mismatch in the post? Stevenson. Lockdown defense and thunderous dunks? Stevenson.
Kyan Evans started at point guard to begin the Tar Heels' campaign, but Dixon's December emergence won him the job. Dixon gives off Kendall Marshall vibes: calm running the offense, but can provide a quick scoring burst when called upon.
Hopefully, UNC stays injury free as it chases a seventh NCAA Tournament Championship. Davis is doing a phenomenal job in the face of adversity – and North Carolina is lucky to have him as head coach.
Follow us @TarHeelsWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of North Carolina Tar Heels news, notes and opinions.
Carter led a five-minute segment during the hourlong pregame show critiquing Tennessee. Carter said she saw a team that had "no belief" and that it didn't look like the players knew who to turn to.
Carter, who played at Tennessee from 2012-16, said it looked like Tennessee players didn't believe in Caldwell's system.
Caldwell was asked for her response to Carter's comments after Tennessee (16-11, 8-7 SEC) lost 89-73 to No. 6 LSU (25-4, 11-4) at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center on Feb. 26.
"I think that it's fair for the most critical people of this program to be the people who have built this program," Caldwell said. "And it's hard for me to get upset with a lot of critique when I'm my biggest critic, and I know that things aren't going the way that they need to be going. And I’m not leaving work every day, happy and satisfied and patting myself on the back. No one in our program is.
"We have a program full of love, we have a program full of honesty, and we know that, and I think that that's why they've been able to be so resilient through this."
Carter's comments came after the Lady Vols lost by historic margins to UConn and South Carolina.
Tennessee has had better showings as of late, but it has still lost five straight games and eight of its last 10 after falling to LSU.
The Lady Vols will wrap up the regular season against No. 5 Vanderbilt at home on March 1 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN).
Carter, a former Lady Vol herself, led a five-minute segment during the hourlong pregame show critiquing Tennessee. Carter said she saw a team that had "no belief" and that it didn't look like the players knew who to turn to.
Carter, who played at Tennessee from 2012-16, said it looked like Tennessee players didn't believe in Caldwell's system.
Caldwell was asked for her response to Carter's comments after Tennessee (16-11, 8-7 SEC) lost 89-73 to No. 6 LSU (25-4, 11-4) at the Pete Maravich Assembly Center on Feb. 26.
"I think that it's fair for the most critical people of this program to be the people who have built this program," Caldwell said. "And it's hard for me to get upset with a lot of critique when I'm my biggest critic, and I know that things aren't going the way that they need to be going. And I’m not leaving work every day, happy and satisfied and patting myself on the back. No one in our program is.
"We have a program full of love, we have a program full of honesty, and we know that, and I think that that's why they've been able to be so resilient through this."
Carter's comments came after the Lady Vols lost by historic margins to both UConn and South Carolina.
Tennessee has had better showings as of late, but it has still lost five straight games and eight of its last 10 after falling to LSU.
The Lady Vols will wrap up the regular season against No. 5 Vanderbilt at home on March 1 (2 p.m. ET, ESPN).
Hundreds of college football standouts are in Indianapolis for the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine. The week of action began on Tuesday with coach and general manager media availability.
Thursday brought the main reason for fans to tune in: on-field drills and testing. Measurements came in for those linebacker and defensive line prospects, as well.
That data provided plenty more information on the draft class as a whole. We now have a wider understanding of prospects at linebacker, defensive line and kicker.
Scouts, analysts, fans and front offices tuned in for Ohio State's dynamic duo of Arvell Reese and Sonny Styles, who stole the show. Texas Tech's David Bailey also crashed the party and made a case as a potential top-3 selection come April.
On the first big day of action from Indianapolis, who were some big winners and losers? Here's our choices from Thursday's combine action:
Winner: DT Caleb Banks
Banks made his case Thursday to be the first defensive tackle selected in the 2026 NFL Draft. He measured in as the tallest (6-foot-6) and third-heaviest (327 pounds) defensive tackle in the group with the longest arms (35 inches).
His athletic testing numbers were an important, especially in the jumps. His broad jump was tied for second among all defensive tackles at 9 feet, 6 inches and he hit 32 inches in the vertical jump. He had to call his day early due to his cleats irritating his feet, but he made an impression.
Loser: Edge Rueben Bain Jr.
There's no way around it: Bain's arm length was a question coming into the week. He was surprised by it being such a topic of conversation but his arms measured in at under 31 inches – some of the shortest arms for the position in recent years.
The film says Bain relies more on powerful moves that belie his short arms. He knows how to work around those limitations effectively; you don't lead the FBS in pressures on accident.
Now that we have this measurement, it will follow him well beyond today. Even if his arms somehow measure longer at Miami's Pro Day, if he struggles as a rookie this narrative will persist. Just ask Will Campbell.
Thanks to his teammate Reese's rise during the 2025 season, Styles lost his status as LB1 in this class. Some fans are warming up to the Buckeyes linebacker and he showed off on testing day.
First, he measured in bigger than his teammate Reese at 6-foot-5, 244 pounds and 32 ½-inch long arms. He was expected to test well and he backed that up on the field.
He started things off with a 43 ½-inch in the vertical jump, a record for someone who hits both his height and weight measurements. He hit 11 feet, 2 inches in the broad jump to lead the position in both events. He put a bow on the performance with a 4.47 40-yard dash, tied for the best at the position.
Luckily for Howell, Bain's arm length took the headlines. But Howell's arms were even shorter at 30 ¼ inches – putting him among the shortest arms for the edge position of the last decade.
Howell's game is more built on bend and burst than power like Bain. That makes his measurements more concerning. If he's able to be long-armed by most tackles in the NFL, it shrinks the ways he can be effective as an edge rusher. It's a harsh truth teams will have to reckon with when considering whether or not to draft him in the first round.
Winner: DT DeMonte Capehart
The 2025 Clemson Tigers defense will have many draft picks come April. Cornerback Avieon Terrell, defensive tackle Peter Woods and edge rusher T.J. Parker could all be off the board by the end of Round 1.
Capehart proved today that there are other talents worth considering as well.
He measured in at 6-foot-5 and 313 pounds with 33 ⅞ inch arms. That's the kind of size teams like to see at the position because it offers alignment versatility. Then, he stepped onto the field for drills.
Capehart ran 4.85 seconds in the 40-yard dash, the fourth-fastest time of the day at the position. Everyone faster than him were at least 15 pounds lighter than him. He then hit 33 ½ inches in the vertical jump and looked light on his feet during drills.
Feb. 26—GRAND FORKS — Grand Forks Central and Grand Forks Red River High School teams are set to compete at the 2026 North Dakota Esports State Tournament Friday and Saturday at UND. Students will be competing across games like Rocket League, Super Smash Bros. Ultimate and Fortnite, among others.
Red River and Central hold seedings in Super Smash Bros. and Rocket League. Among them is Central's undefeated Rocket League team this year, who hold a No. 2 seeding heading into the tournament. Central captain Luke Riley has been excited to see the program grow as a whole as his team has been improving with each match.
"It's been fun," he said. "I have mostly wanted to see this program grow and give others the opportunity to join and participate in the program."
Riley has been competing alongside Joseph Springer and Brandon Sullivan as the trio has racked up a 27-0 record through an eight-week regular season and two divisional tournament games.
In Super Smash Bros., Jaded Halvorson returns to the state tournament as the state runner-up while holding a 7-0 record this year. Halvorson comes into the tournament as the No. 3 seed. Alek Sayler and Caleb Machart will also compete in Super Smash Bros.
Along with individual championships, one school will be named the All-Around State Champion based on placement points accrued across all of their state qualifying teams. Thirty-eight schools are represented by 270 competitors this year.
Feb. 26—GRAND FORKS — UND has picked up a commitment from U.S. Under-17 Team defenseman Carson Scott.
Scott, from Dayton, Minn., plays a physical, shutdown style on the back end.
The 6-foot-3, 182-pound left-hander has a goal and 11 points in 45 games this season for the U.S. Under-17 Team.
"I am proud and honored to announce my commitment to the University of North Dakota to further my education and hockey career," Scott wrote on Instagram. "I would like to thank God, my teammates, coaches, advisors, family, friends, and anyone who has helped me along the way. #gohawks"
Scott visited UND's campus this week.
Scott played prep hockey last season for Hill-Murray, tallying two goals and 12 points in 28 games.
Scott joins UND's defensive pipeline which includes Garrett Lindberg of the Fargo Force (United States Hockey League), Ethan MacKenzie of the Edmonton Oil Kings (Western Hockey League), Brayden Klimpke of the Saskatoon Blades (WHL), Zaide Penner of the Fargo Force and Scott's U.S. Under-17 Team teammate, Beck Thoreson.
Lindberg and MacKenzie are expected to come to campus in the fall. The others are future commits.
Feb. 26—KALAMAZOO, Mich. — UND senior goaltender Gibson Homer grew up in Grand Rapids, Mich.
He's back in his home state, about 40 minutes south, in Kalamazoo, Mich., to play in this
weekend's showdown
between No. 3 UND and No. 4 Western Michigan.
Homer spoke to the Herald this week.
Q. What's it like heading back to your home state?
A. I'm super excited. I've never played a game during my four years in Michigan, besides one up in Northern Michigan, which is eight hours away from (my home). So, I don't really consider that close to home at all. So, I'm super excited. I've waited a long time for this.
Q. Have you ever played in Kalamazoo?
A. I don't think so, actually. There were no AAA teams (in Kalamazoo). Maybe I did when was young, young. But not to my recollection.
Q. How long did you play in Grand Rapids growing up?
A. My whole career until I was 15 and made the U.S. National Team.
Q. How many family and friends will be in attendance?
A. A lot, a lot. I have buddies who go to Western, because it's the closest big school to me. And there will just be a lot of family and family friends who have waited four years for me to play close to home.
Q. What color jersey will your friends be wearing this weekend?
A. I told them they better be wearing green. I guess we'll see.
Q. What musical artist have you listened to the most in the last year?
A. Mac Miller.
Q. What's your biggest talent outside of playing hockey?
A. Card games.
Q. Who is your best-dressed teammate?
A. Ben Strinden.
Q. Outside of hockey, who is your favorite sports team to watch?
A. The (Detroit) Lions. That's including hockey, too.
Q. What's the best advice you've ever received?
A. It's simple and cliché, but "control what you can control."
Q. Who is the best hockey player you've ever played a game against?
A. Zeev Buium.
Q. What's your dream job outside of being a pro hockey player?
A. I'm still trying to figure that one out. I'd say a CEO of some sort.
Q. What movie do you quote the most?
A. Probably Ron Burgundy.
Q. What app do you use the most on your phone?
A. Spotify.
Q. What's on your lock screen?
A. My girlfriend.
Q. What emoji do you use the most?
A. The hands that look like they're praying, but they could be clapping. That one.
Q. If you had to eat one meal for an entire week, what would you choose?
A. Chicken parm.
Q. What's one food you will not eat?
A. Tomatoes.
Q. Besides The Ralph, where's your favorite place you've ever played a hockey game?
A. Maybe Miami (Goggin Ice Center in Oxford, Ohio).
Q. If you could go back in time and attend one sporting event, what would you choose?
A. I don't know which one specifically, but I want to go to a Thanksgiving game with the Lions. Never been to one. Never been to Ford Field, actually.
Feb. 26—FARGO — Grand Forks Red River junior Caden Ulmer emerged postgame from the Scheels Arena locker room sporting a bloody bandage across his chin.
In the first period, Ulmer was hit from behind into the net, his chin came down hard on the crossbar and needed to leave the ice with a bloody face.
"It woke me up, I guess you could say," said Ulmer, who expected the cut to need stitches.
That was bad news for Jamestown.
Following the chin injury, Ulmer scored a hat trick as the Roughriders pulled away from Jamestown 5-1 in the quarterfinals of the North Dakota state boys hockey tournament on Thursday.
Red River advances to face West Fargo Sheyenne in the state semifinals, a game the Roughriders have won six years in a row — a span that includes three state championships. The game begins at 5:30 p.m. Friday.
Red River looked a bit shaky early, giving up a goal on the first shot of the game for Jamestown, which was making its first state tournament appearance since 2023.
Jamestown sophomore Parker Roelfsema scored his team-leading 21st goal of the year about five minutes into the game on a seemingly harmless shot.
"I thought we had to pick up our game," Red River defenseman Brekkin Hultberg said. "I felt like it was slow at the start, and we just kept missing the net. Our game plan was get shots on net and go harder."
Ulmer set the Riders back on the right path when he scored his first goal on the power play. Late in the first period, Ulmer scored coming down the middle of the ice on a rush after receiving a feed from Kale Gruenberg.
With three goals in the quarterfinals, Ulmer now has 31 goals on the season and eight goals in his last six games.
"Once we scored, we got a little more settled in," Red River coach Tim Skarperud said. "It might have taken the intermission to just kind of have a little heard to heart about doing things the right way and playing the game the right way.
"(The intermission conversation) was just a bit of a wake-up call ... like, okay guys, we are in the state tournament. I think we were looking for the pretty play. Once we started getting our feet moving and supporting the puck, then better things started happening."
Red River goalie Rilan Korynta set the tone early in the second period, stuffing a clean breakaway by Jamestown's Bennett Goehner.
Meanwhile, the Rider offense tacked on second-period goals from Gruenberg and Ulmer to push the lead out to 3-1. Gruenberg scored his 18th of the season after dangling a defender and sniping a corner at 1:25 of the second, while Ulmer tipped a point shot from Hultberg on the power play.
Mason Brenno scored Red River's fourth goal at 34 seconds of the third period, while Ulmer completed the hat trick on a long shot into an empty net. The Blue Jays had pulled their goalie with about three minutes to go on the power play for a 6-on-4 advantage.
The Riders split with Sheyenne during the regular season.
"Just stay with our game," Ulmer said of the key to the matchup. "We like to be physical. If we play fast and physical, (Skarperud) thinks we'll play better. I think we just have to keep to his standards and just play hard."
ALLENDALE - The Grand Valley State women's basketball team doesn't like giving up homecourt advantage.
It can be pivotal in the postseason.
The Lakers are well aware of this and have done everything they can to protect homecourt in recent years.
The Lakers have 31 consecutive home wins since and have won 62 of their past 63 games at home during the four years of this senior class. No. 2 GVSU beat No. 13 Ferris State 70-44 on Thursday, Feb. 26, to close out the regular season with an outright GLIAC title - the fifth in a row.
"It is cool to see how we have grown, our class especially, from scout team to now being starters. It has been a big change, and we put a lot of time into it and this (title) shows that," GVSU senior Paige VanStee said. "We love it (when a game gets physical like this). We love the competition. This is a huge rivalry, and we know what it means to play Ferris."
That means, the Lakers (27-1, 19-1 GLIAC), will host the GLIAC Tournament next week at Grand Valley Field House, which saw 1,304 fans on Thursday. If they win that, they will almost assuredly host the first three rounds of the NCAA Division II tournament.
"It is just special because of all the work we have put in over the years," GVSU senior Nicole Kamin said. "It is so cool to get more chances to play at home, staying in the area, sleeping in your own bed and practicing on this court every day. It is definitely and advantage, especially with our fans."
That formula worked pretty well last year, leading to a national championship.
"They are all special and they are all different. The cool thing about this one is last year, we lost five really good seniors and to come back and do it again in one of the best years of the conference is special," GVSU coach Mike Williams said. "We have persevered and stayed the course."
GVSU's last home loss was in the NCAA Division II regional final on March 18, 2024, to rival Ferris State (49-46).
That was not going to be the case this time in the rivalry showdown.
The Lakers erupted quickly for a 12-0 run to start the game behind 3-pointers from MacKenzie Bisballe and Paige VanStee.
VanStee extended the lead with a scoop under the arm of a defender, then poked away the next possession from the Bulldogs and raced for the fastbreak layup, pushing the GVSU lead to 29-15 with 6:25 to go in the half.
It didn't get any closer. A couple of 3s from Kamin and four inside baskets from Ava Scanlon kept the pace for the Lakers.
VanStee finished with 17 points and 14 rebounds. Bisballe had 18 points and two steals. Kamin finished with 11 points, five assists, three steals and three blocks. Scanlan finished with eight points and Lexi Plitzuweit dished out four assists.
Ferris State (23-5, 16-3 GLIAC) was led by Mia Riley with 16 points and 10 rebounds.
The Bulldogs might have a shot against the Lakers again in the GLIAC Tournament or even the NCAA Tournament.
"We knew we had to get ahead of the physicality and handle ourselves in the paint. We have to do that a lot better than we did," Ferris State coach Kurt Westendorp said. "Offensively, we have to get into a better flow. This one stings, but we might have a chance at them the next two weeks. That is a deserving championship team that will take an A-plus effort to beat."
For the first time since the early 2000s, Vermont women's basketball claimed the outright regular-season championship in America East.
The preseason favorites, Catamounts secured the top seed for the conference tournament after earning a 68-37 victory over UMass Lowell in their regular-season finale on Thursday, Feb. 26 after being selected as the
This is the Catamounts' seventh regular-season title and first outright title since 2002. Vermont (24-7, AE 13-3) now has homecourt advantage throughout the America East tournament which is set to begin on Thursday, March 5. The Catamounts are seeking back-to-back trips to the NCAA Tournament.
The regular season ended on a high note after suffering another wake-up call loss to UMBC on Feb. 19. The game was never close after the first six minutes.
Following the first media timeout at the 3:48 mark, Vermont exploded for an 18-0 run spanning the first and second quarters helping the Catamounts take a 26-9 lead. During that run, Jadyn Weltz, Keira Hanson and Jacklynn Hosier all converted 3-pointers helping open up the offense that saw Nikola Priede do the early scoring.
The first half was the type of half where everything was working for Vermont. With time winding down in the second quarter, Malia Lenz corralled the rebound off Hanson's miss and fired off a jumper in one motion that fell through the hoop beating the buzzer.
The Catamounts defense picked up where they left off in their win against NJIT on Feb. 21, forcing 10 turnovers in the first half and turning those giveaways into 19 points. The River Hawks only shot 19.2% from the field in the first half as the America East's top-ranked defense held UMass Lowell (8-20, AE 2-13) to just 13 points in the first half.
Vermont finished with 26 points off turnovers after forcing 16 giveaways that included nine steals.
It was cruise control in the second half for Vermont. Emma Haan came alive making four triples finishing with a career-high 15 points. Haan was one of three Catamounts to score double-digits joining Priede (20 points) and Hanson (16 points).
Everyone who played significant minutes, Lenz, Weltz, Haan, Priede, Hanson and Hosier all contributed points. The Catamounts finished the game shooting 41.8% from the field with nine made 3-pointers.
The Catamounts have their second bye on the final day of the regular season (Saturday, Feb. 28), so they can enjoy some rest before the postseason begins.
Vermont does not know its quarterfinals opponent yet, but it is between UMass Lowell and New Hampshire, both of whom are battling for the final spot. The Catamounts swept both teams during the regular season.
The finalized America East tournament bracket will be set on Saturday, Feb. 28.
The linebackers brought elite speed and explosiveness to Indianapolis, and this 2026 group may have been the most impressive unit, pound-for-pound. Multiple sub-4.50 forty times, a 43.5-inch vertical, and an 11-foot-2-inch broad jump headlined a loaded workout session.
Modern NFL linebackers must run, cover, and close space quickly. This class is trying to show that they can do all three.
Player
School
40
10 Yard
Vertical
Broad
Sonny Styles
Ohio State
4.46
1.51
43.5"
11'2"
Kaleb Elarms-Orr
TCU
4.47
1.55
40.0"
10'4"
Anthony Hill Jr.
Texas
4.51
1.57
37.0"
10'5"
Kyle Louis
Pittsburgh
4.53
1.55
39.5"
10'9"
Namdi Obiazor
TCU
4.53
1.54
37.0"
9'11"
Karson Sharar
Iowa
4.56
1.55
40.0"
10'3"
Justin Jefferson
Alabama
4.57
1.57
38.5"
10'5"
Jack Kelly
BYU
4.57
1.57
37.0"
10'5"
Jacob Rodriguez
Texas Tech
4.57
1.56
38.5"
10'1"
Jake Golday
Cincinnati
4.62
1.55
39.0"
10'5"
Owen Heinecke
Oklahoma
4.62
1.64
34.5"
9'11"
Xavian Sorey Jr.
Arkansas
4.63
1.60
37.5"
10'0"
Keyshaun Elliott
Arizona State
—
—
38.0"
10'5"
Jimmy Rolder
Michigan
—
—
36.0"
9'11"
2026 Linebacker Combine Averages
40-yard dash 4.55 seconds
10-yard split 1.56 seconds
Vertical jump 38.4 inches
Broad jump 10 feet 4 inches
Top Performers
Fastest 40
Sonny Styles 4.46
Kaleb Elarms-Orr 4.47
Anthony Hill Jr. 4.51
Best 10 Yard Split
Sonny Styles 1.51
Namdi Obiazor 1.54
Kaleb Elarms-Orr 1.55
Best Vertical
Sonny Styles 43.5 inches
Kaleb Elarms-Orr and Karson Sharar 40.0 inches
Kyle Louis 39.5 inches
Best Broad Jump
Sonny Styles 11 feet 2 inches
Kyle Louis 10 feet 9 inches
Anthony Hill Jr., Justin Jefferson, Jack Kelly, and Jake Golday 10 feet 5 inches
Sonny Styles has been a bright spot at the 2026 NFL Combine.
The star Ohio State linebacker wasted no time making an impression in Indianapolis, showing off size and athleticism in a big way. Styles was as-advertised in the measurement portion of the program. He checked in at 6-foot-5 and 244 pounds, but it was the jump that stole the show.
Styles recorded a 43.5-inch vertical jump, the highest by any player 6-foot-4 or taller since 2003.
Pro Football Hall of Famer Warren Sapp is no longer on the coaching staff at Colorado under head coach Deion Sanders after spending two seasons in Boulder as a high-profile, lower-rung assistant coach.
Sapp, 53, never had served as a full-time coach before he joined Sanders’ staff in 2024, first as a graduate assistant coach and then as pass rush coordinator. But he said he loved his new role. It’s not clear why he’s taking his mohawk out of town.
“Warren Sapp has resigned from the CU football coaching staff to pursue other opportunities,” Colorado’s athletic department said in a statement Feb. 26. “CU Athletics thanks Warren for his contributions to our football program over the last two seasons and for his commitment to our student-athletes.”
Sapp is one of several recent coaching staff departures for the Buffaloes on defense, including defensive line coach Domata Peko, who left to join the staff of the NFL’s Pittsburgh Steelers. Defensive coordinator Robert Livingston also left to join the staff of the NFL’s Denver Broncos, leaving a void that was filled by Chris Marve, who already was on staff as the team’s new linebackers coach.
The Buffs led the Big 12 Conference in quarterback sacks in 2024 with 39 but regressed in 2025 with only 13, which dropped them to a tie for 14th out of 16 teams in the league.
Sapp earned $150,000 at Colorado in his first year at Colorado, working an entry-level coaching job before getting paid $156,000 in his second year. His prospective hiring at Colorado in 2024 raised concerns among domestic violence survivor advocates in Colorado because of his previous history. But Colorado released a statement then noting that athletic director Rick George “personally met with Warren to clearly articulate the department’s standards and expectations, to which he acknowledged and agreed."
Colorado opens the spring practice season March 2 with 15 practices through April 11. It will be the fourth spring season in Boulder under Sanders, whose team last year finished 3-9 in 2025 after a 9-4 season in 2024 and a 4-8 season in 2023.
With the No. 6 Tigers leading Lady Vols basketball 43-42 at halftime, ESPN reporter Holly Rowe interviewed Mulkey before she headed to the locker room.
"This is not good basketball. Anybody that's a basketball junkie is looking at this like rec ball. That's what it looks like out here," Mulkey said. "You take it, that's a hot potato. No, you take it. Defense, help side, nonexistent. It's one-on-one basketball by both teams right now, but Tennessee makes you play that way.
"It's just kind of kamikaze. Take care of the ball. Take care of the ball, keep them out of the paint, rebound the ball, and you might win tonight."
Both teams had their moments with turnovers in the first half, Tennessee committing nine to LSU's seven. The Lady Vols found some early success with their press and their defense, and they also outrebounded the Tigers 27-18 in the first half.
Mulkey's comments were similar to Kentucky coach Kenny Brooks after Tennessee beat Kentucky 60-58 on Jan. 22.
"I think we set women's basketball back about 15 years today with the way both teams played," Brooks said. "Shooting under 30% from 3, 30-plus turnovers – I wouldn't pay to watch it."
Kentucky committed 21 turnovers in the matchup, which led to 21 points for Tennessee.
Crystal Palace will find out their Conference League last-16 opponents in the draw on Friday at 13:00 GMT [Getty Images]
Key players have gone, the manager is leaving and has criticised the club and upset fans - yet Crystal Palace's chaotic campaign could still end in European glory.
It has been a wild 12 months for the Eagles, who have found themselves in the headlines on an almost daily basis.
"I don't know what all the fuss was about," joked captain Dean Henderson shortly after they gained a 2-0 win over Bosnian side Zrinjski to seal a 3-1 aggregate victory and reach the last 16 of the Conference League.
It has been an emotional rollercoaster for Palace supporters.
In May they won their first major trophy, beating Manchester City to win the FA Cup, then added another three months later with a penalty shootout win over Liverpool to clinch the Community Shield.
But winger Eberechi Eze left for Arsenal, skipper Marc Guehi nearly joined Liverpool, then moved to Manchester City five months later and top scorer Jean-Philippe Mateta was on the verge of signing for AC Milan, only to fail a medical.
Oliver Glasner, the most successful manager in the club's history, then announced in January he was leaving at the end of the season, before telling the club's board they had "abandoned" the squad.
That appeared to be the end of his tenure, but he has stayed, though fans held up a banner on Sunday before the 1-0 win over Wolves saying he was "finished".
Maxence Lacroix and Evann Guessand scored the goals for Crystal Palace as they beat Zrinjski 2-0 at Selhurst Park to seal a 3-1 aggregate victory [Getty Images]
Asked if he had assurance of his job from his bosses, Glasner said "100%", adding: "There's so much noise, sometimes you really don't understand it. Maybe I gave some interviews that were not helpful and I have to admit that, but I'm always telling what I'm feeling, it's how I am.
"We're in a very good position in the league and the Conference League and it is up to us to make a really great season of it."
Palace are 13th in the Premier League, but 10 points clear of the relegation zone and only three away from eighth, which could be a position high enough to secure a European return next season.
For Glasner, he says the way the players are still performing for him is evidence that his job is secure.
"If the players believe in me and the staff, that's the most important thing, otherwise, you can pack your suitcase and go home because the players have to perform on the pitch," added the Austrian.
"We have a great togetherness in the group - players, staff, really positive. The same with the sporting director and the chairman. They are sometimes wondering, 'Hey, this is the second-best Premier League season ever'.
"The best was last year. So maybe the best two years in Crystal Palace's history, playing European football for the first time."
The Conference League, Europe's third-tier competition, is only in its fifth season, with two English sides - West Ham in 2023 and Chelsea in 2025 - among its first four winners.
From the start of this season's edition Palace have been the bookmakers' favourites, even though they only finished 10th in the league phase and had to go through two matches against Bosnian champions Zrinjski to get into the last 16.
But there are not many clubs in the competition Palace will fear.
They will find out on Friday whether they play German side Mainz, a team 13th in the Bundesliga, or Cypriot side Larnaca, who only scored seven goals in six league phase matches, though they did beat Palace 1-0 in October.
"We're hungry for more [silverware] but you don't talk about winning it three months out," added goalkeeper Henderson, who became Palace captain after Guehi left the club.
"It's knockout football and we go into it with confidence. You see the supporters get into the stadium early and Selhurst was rocking tonight and we can make it a fortress."
Former Palace defender James Tomkins, speaking on TNT Sports, said: "They go through to the next stage, into the last 16 of this competition and they are favourites to go on and win it from here.
"They've got to concentrate on the Conference League. The opportunity they've got is incredible. To add a third trophy in two seasons would be remarkable and beyond the wildest dreams of the fans.
"They needed a second goal to get over the line and it's a great night for the club. The atmosphere is amazing and you can see all the fans are behind the team and the manager and it means a lot."
Fans dreaming of successful end to Glasner's reign
Oliver Glasner has won two trophies at Crystal Palace after becoming their manager in February 2024 [Getty Images]
Glasner, whose side have now gained two successive victories after a 12-game run from December without a win, felt the club were in a good position to push on and end the season well.
"It means a lot. We have not had easy days but now back-to-back wins at Selhurst Park," he added. "Everybody was expecting a win and they are the most difficult ones.
"Since day one we have had a great relationship with the fans. Yes, they have been a bit critical but they can be when the results and performances are not there.
"But we are in a good position in the Premier League, three points behind position eight, and in the last 16 of the Conference League.
"Now it is different to the autumn when we were playing three competitions, 12 weeks playing every third day."
With the club's injury problems easing and with Mateta along with key midfielder Jefferson Lerma expected back in two weeks, hopes will be rising among Palace fans that the most chaotic of seasons could end in more record-breaking glory and a first European trophy.
This marks the third consecutive year the Dolphins ranked first overall in the report card, obtained by ESPN.
“Players consistently describe the organization as ‘the best in the NFL,’ ” the survey concluded.
The survey included responses by 1,759 players from Nov. 2 to Dec. 11.
The Minnesota Vikings placed second and Washington Commanders third.
Since the Dolphins placed first in the previous two polls, the results couldn’t come as a surprise. Likewise, no one should have been caught off guard that the results were leaked despite team owners voting to prevent the NFLPA from disclosing the results. Teams in the upper half of the ratings have every reason to want those grades published, while those at the bottom don’t.
The Pittsburgh Steelers ranked last, including for their home field.
The Dolphins received grades of A-minus to A-plus in all but three of the 17 categories. They were given an A-plus for their weight room and strength coaches; an A for the food/dining area, training room, training staff, defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver, team travel and team ownership; and an A-minus for home game field, nutritionist/dietician, locker room, position coaches, offensive coordinator Frank Smith and general manager Chris Grier (replaced on Halloween by interim GM Champ Kelly).
They were given a B-plus for treatment of families.
The Dolphins received a B for special teams coordinator Craig Aukerman and head coach Mike McDaniel.
The NFLPA's annual report cards are no longer being made public, but a few NFL reporters leaked this year's grades and they don't look good for Atlanta Falcons head coach Kevin Stefanski. According to NFL insider Dianna Russini, Stefanski earned a "C-" grade in his final year coaching the Cleveland Browns.
That just so happens to be the lowest grade in the entire NFL. Stefanski, a two-time AP Coach of the Year winner, seemed like a good fit to work with the team's young offensive talent. However, his teams did struggle in both 2024 and 2025.
Stefanski went 8-26 over the last two years, and was fired after a five-win season in 2025. The Falcons fired head coach Raheem Morris, who led the team to a 16-18 record over that same span.
Morris earned a grade of "B+" in this year's NFLPA report card. The Falcons never took that next step under Morris, but he never came close to losing the locker room.
Atlanta closed the season on a four-game winning streak despite being eliminated from playoff contention. Check out the full NFLPA player coach grades, as shared by Russini below.
NFLPA HC report card results:
A+ — Sean McVay, Dan Quinn A — Ben Johnson, Dan Campbell, Andy Reid, Kevin O’Connell, Mike Vrabel, Aaron Glenn, Nick Sirianni, Mike Tomlin, Mike Macdonald A- — Sean McDermott, Dave Canales, Zac Taylor, Brian Schottenheimer, DeMeco Ryans, Shane…
The Browns have long been known as a dysfunctional organization, however, it doesn't look good for Stefanski that the players gave him such a low grade. Cleveland's plan last season was highly unusual from the top down.
From their decision to draft Dillon Gabriel and Shedeur Sanders, to their reluctance to move on from Deshaun Watson, the Browns didn't seem interested in winning last season. Some of that undoubtedly falls on Stefanski, but the Falcons weren't the only team interested in his services.
The fans will just have to trust that president of football Matt Ryan made the right call in hiring the former Browns coach.
On Tuesday, motorists in Omaha, Nebraska, were stranded at an intersection after a gigantic sinkhole opened up, trapping them in an open cavity in the road.
Moments later, bystanders stepped in to help the drivers and get them to safety. Among the good Samaritans who sprang into action were two Nebraska Omaha Mavericks women's basketball players.
“I was still in the car, and I saw a man in a hole,” guard Olivia Borsutzki, who approached the scene first, said. “I was like, ‘I need to help.’ Nobody was helping.”
Borsutzki's teammate, guard Esra Kurban, who arrived moments later, was still trying to process what was happening. “I didn’t even know sinkholes existed,” Kurban said. “I was thinking, is it going to fall more?”
Within several minutes, Borsutzki and Kurban were able to get both drivers out of the sinkhole. The players say one of the drivers was "visibly shaken", and they later offered to let him sit in their car. No injuries were reported in connection with the two-car incident, and surrounding roads were closed off as officials assessed the situation.
"Two @UNOmaha Mavericks didn’t hesitate," Sarnoff said. "Proud of @OmahaWBB's Olivia Borsutzki and Esra Kurban for stepping up in a critical moment Tuesday next to campus."
Borsutzki and Kurban say they thought other people, including nearby adults, would step in to help the stranded drivers. However, several cars drove past the accident, and others close by had their cell phones out to record.
“We thought grown men were going to stop and help,” Borsutzki and Kurban said. “But no one did. So we left the car.”
According to a report, the Pittsburgh Steelers have met with former Penn State quarterback Drew Allar at the NFL Scouting Combine. Allar is throwing this week at the combine after missing more than two months of the 2025 college football season with a broken ankle.
Allar threw for 1,100 yards in six games in 2025. The potential is there but after throwing for 3,327 yards in 2024, his season was off to a slow start prior to the injury.
The best thing working to Allar's advantage in the 2026 NFL draft is just how weak the quarterback class is this year. Indiana's Fernando Mendoza has established himself as the top quarterback in this class and the consensus No. 1 overall pick, but after that, things get a little muddy. Alabama's Ty Simpson is throwing at the combine this week as well in hopes of cementing his status as the No. 2 quarterback with Allar squarely in the running to be the third quarterback off the board and a target for the Steelers.
Well, if you do, you might have a spot on the Pittsburgh Steelers, because their players don't seem to be happy playing for the franchise at the moment.
The annual player survey, where players get to grade their own franchises on how well they treat the player from the locker room to food to the coaches, was leaked on Thursday to ESPN.
While teams like the Miami Dolphins and Minnesota Vikings were lauded for how well they treat their players, the Pittsburgh Steelers were at the very bottom.
The team somehow got an F- in their home locker room, which makes more sense given that one anonymous player complained there are only 5 stalls for the entire team in the bathroom.
Treatment of Families? F.
Home Game Field? F-.
Team Travel? F.
Ironically, the one category that the players ranked the highest was their head coach, Mike Tomlin, who received a strong A grade.
Tomlin stepped down as head coach following the team's loss in the postseason to the Houston Texans at home.
It's not a good sign for a Steelers franchise whose stability can be credited to Tomlin's overseeing of the team for the past two decades. Although they didn't progress in the playoffs, their consistency in the regular season carried the team farther than their overall roster strength might suggest on paper.
With Tomlin out of the building, it's up to the new head coach, Mike McCarthy, to keep the ship steady.
Although the former Green Bay Packers head coach, who won a Super Bowl with current Steelers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, can't change the bathroom situation or the quality of the field they play on, he has to do his best to keep the personnel teams aligned.
It's the one reason Steelers players gave good to great grades, and if they can't keep that afloat, then Pittsburgh will be regarded as by far the worst place to play football in all of the NFL.
BERRIEN SPRINGS — Edwardsburg’s boys basketball team trailed 34-22 at halftime and went on to fall to Niles, 57-38, in Division 2 district semifinal action on Wednsday at Berrien Springs High School.
Maverick Gates scored 11 points, including three 3-pointers, to lead the Eddies, who finish at 15-9.
The Eddies played most of the game without injured point guard Blaise Crist, who didn’t play the entire second half.
Reed Gates and Brandon Wright each added nine for Edwardsburg. All of Wright’s points came on 3-pointers.
Maverick Gates’ 3-pointer gave the Eddies their last lead of the game at 10-9 in the first quarter.
The last tie of the contest came at 13 when Brandon Wright connected on a 3-pointer in the first.
Niles responded with a 7-0 run to take a 20-13 lead in the second quarter.
Edwardsburg pulled within 24-18 on a trey from Brandon Wright in the second, but the Eddies wouldn’t get any closer the rest of the game.
The Vikings, who improved to 17-6, took control of the game by going on a 10-2 run to take a commanding lead in the fourth quarter.
It was third win this year by Niles over Edwardsburg. In the previous games the Vikings prevailed, 70-35, and 59-56.
NEW YORK -- The Brooklyn Nets looked like they were capable of being one of the better teams in the league during the month of December when they were operating on all cylinders. However, since the calendar turned to January, Brooklyn has looked like a shell of its former self and head coach Jordi Fernandez explained how the team remains positive amidst the extended losing.
"Winning matters and competing for games is extremely important. The record is what it is, we’re well aware of it and we don’t like it. But, the players show up and work every day," Fernandez said prior to Thursday's matchup against Victor Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs. The Nets have the worst record in the NBA in 2026 and at this point, it seems that the team is just trying to stay focused and continue to improve while keeping the big picture in mind.
"It’s not uncomfortable, it’s not a bad feeling. Coming here and feeling like we can compete against anybody has to be important," Fernandez continued. "If you’re up 10, you want to be up 20. If you’re down 20, you want to be down 10. We have to be competitive and understand this is a process."
While Brooklyn is hoping to win every game from now until the end of the season, the fact of the matter is the Nets have the eighth-hardest schedule to finish the year, in terms of opponent win percentage. Players like forward Michael Porter Jr. have recently spoken about maintaining the mindset of winning while keeping in mind that part of the team's mission is also to develop the younger players on the team.
If the Nets are lucky after this season is over, they may have the chance to draft a franchise player of their own, similar to what the Spurs did three years ago when they drafted Wembanyama. This season, similar to last season, has been hard for the organization as well as the fanbase, but everyone in the building is choosing to remain positive down the stretch with the hope that the growing pains will be worth it when the rewards start pouring in.
For anyone on the outside looking in, the annual NFL Scouting Combine feels like a glorified farce. It feels like it encourages a lot of open (irresponsible) projection about incoming NFL prospects. But if you're actually attending the event as a scout or coach, you should probably do everything you can to maximize your time in Indianapolis. That, or ensure you got enough sleep the night before. It's a busy weekend. You need your energy.
Both of these concepts are evidently lost on second-year New York Jets head coach Aaron Glenn.
Glenn, who is currently trying to steer the Jets out of their latest oblivion (one he is largely responsible for), was caught on camera dozing off in the middle of positional drills on Thursday. In all honesty, it's not that big of a deal. Glenn was caught on camera in a weak moment, and we shouldn't overanalyze it. I'd venture to guess that all of us non-NFL coaches also have our weak moments during our respective workdays, but there isn't someone filming us. This could have happened to anyone. But when you're trying to rebound from a three-win season at the helm of one of the NFL's preeminent, moribund franchises, maybe you should be more cognizant of optics.
Maybe you should realize that, as one of only 32 coaches, a camera will very likely and eventually veer over to where you're sitting in any public setting. Alas, I can't be too harsh on Glenn here. Judging by the miserable, aimless coaching job he did in his first year with the Jets, it doesn't seem like Glenn is aware of optics at all.
Being caught sleeping with everyone watching at one of the NFL's biggest events of the calendar kinda feels like it's par for the course for him:
The area where the Raiders got the highest marks was their weight room (A+). They have a shiny new state-of-the art facility and the report card shows it. In fact, all the areas they received high marks are related to the the things that are important because they are things that carry over from last year.
Meanwhile the areas where they received the biggest criticism are the areas which have been changed out since this vote was taken late last season. Those were all coaching related.
The worst grade was given to offensive coordinator, a position that was held by Chip Kelly most of last season. That position received a flat 'F' from players. But head coach, DC, STC, and position coaches all got low marks as well.
These grades are very good news for the Raiders. They swapped out the head coach, all the coordinators, and most of the position coaches this season. While they can feel pretty good that players are pleased with all the other areas, including GM John Spytek (A-) and owner Mark Davis (A).
The NFLPA's report cards are no longer released by the association, but ESPN's Kayln Kahler acquired the full results for 2026, and the Green Bay Packers took a big tumble coming out of the 2025 season.
After finishing seventh in 2025, third in 2024 and sixth in 2023, the Packers fell all the way to 21st in 2026, with knocks against the training department, head coach and offensive coordinator creating the steep decline.
This year, over 1,700 players from across the NFL contributed to the report cards, which give players the chance to grade teams on a variety of factors, and the survey was conducted between Nov. 2 and Dec. 11 -- before the Packers' season fell apart. The NFLPA also added several categories, broadening the report card's scope and providing a better overall picture of the 32 teams.
Some additional context from Aaron Nagler on the Packers' report:
In most cases, grades across most teams in specific categories are similar and not exactly notable. It is the outlier grades that are the important ones, and the Packers have several -- mostly on the negative side.
Overall rank
2026: 21st
2025: 7th
The Packers suffered the biggest drop in the rankings among NFL teams between the 2025 and 2026 seasons. After three straight top 10 finishes, the Packers are now a bottom third team.
Treatment of families
2026 grade: C+
2025 grade: B
Not providing daycare for families during home games remains an issue in Green Bay.
Home game field
2026 grade: C+
2025 grade: N/A
Lambeau Field is revered, but the playing surface is unpredictable and often slippery.
Food/dining area
2026 grade: B+
2025 grade: A-
Players wanted more nutritious options at the facility. The Packers ranked sixth in this category last season.
Nutritionist/dietician
2026 grade: B
2025 grade: A-
A big drop here. The Packers ranked seventh in this category last season but now rank among the bottom third.
Locker room
2026 grade: A
2025 grade: B
The Packers completely upgraded the locker rooms at Lambeau Field ahead of the 2025 season, creating a big improvement.
Training room
2026 grade: C
2025 grade: A-
Another huge drop. "Outdated" equipment and a "lack of space" were to blame. The Packers are upgrading the training facilities at Lambeau Field this offseason.
Training staff
2026 grade: C
2025 grade: B
A "lack of trust" drove this poor ranking. Not great coming off a season in which many players suffered big injuries. Players saw the training space and training staff as the top priorities needing to be addressed.
Weight room
2026 grade: A-
2025 grade: A
Strength coaches
2026 grade: B
2025 grade: B
The Packers were one of only five teams to get worse than a B+ grade here.
Position coaches
2026 grade: B+
2025 grade: N/A
The Packers are middle of the pack here.
Offensive coordinator
2026 grade: C
Adam Stenavich was one of eight offensive coordinators to get a C grade or worse. The other seven were fired.
Defensive coordinator
2026 grade: A-
Jeff Hafley, who left to become the Dolphins head coach, was a highly respected assistant coach in Green Bay. For what's it worth, Jonathan Gannon got a B+ in the head coach grades.
Special teams coordinator
2026 grade: B+
Rich Bisaccia was well-received among players, and his B+ grade ranked in the middle of the pack.
Team travel
2026 grade: B-
2025 grade: A-
A lot of complaints here league wide. Only 12 teams graded out higher than a B-, but the Packers did have a big fall in grade.
Head coach
2026 grade: B-
2025 grade: A-
Maybe the most alarming drop. Only six head coaches graded out worse than a B, and LaFleur was one. Four of the five other were fired. LaFleur got an extension. Interestingly enough, many veteran players stood up for LaFleur publicly after the disappointing end to the season.
General manager
2026 grade: B+
A B+ grade for Brian Gutekunst put him in the bottom half of general managers. Like LaFleur, he also got an extension.
Team ownership
2026 grade: A-
2025 grade: A-
This grade stayed steady through the transition from Mark Murphy, who retired, to Ed Policy, who went through his first season in 2025.
Oliver Glasner has been manager of Crystal Palace since February 2024 [Getty Images]
Despite all the on and off-field chaos, Crystal Palace, 13th in the Premier League but 10 points above the relegation zone, could still make more club history by winning their first European trophy.
They remain favourites to win the Conference League, despite only coming 10th in the league phase. The only surprise against Bosnian champions Zrinjski, a strong and well-organised but limited side, was that Palace's winning margin was not bigger.
Guessand, Jorgen Strand Larsen and Daichi Kamada all had goalbound efforts deflected wide before Adam Wharton provided the quality with a wonderful flighted assist for Maxence Lacroix's headed first-half goal.
Palace goalkeeper Dean Henderson did not have a shot on target to deal with from the visitors, although Zrinjski's only real chance came in the 91st minute with Tomi Juric heading wastefully wide, before Evann Guessand scored to seal their place in the next round.
Their potential last-16 opponents will not cause any fear for Palace as Mainz are 13th in the German Bundesliga, while Larnaca only scored seven goals in six matches in the league phase, although they did beat the Eagles 1-0 in October.
But for now, Oliver Glasner, facing regular questions about his position, stays in his role and the Eagles continue their pursuit of a trophy for the ultimate end to a campaign full of highs and lows.
According to ESPN's Kalyn Kahler, the Steelers ranked dead last out of all 32 NFL teams, sliding down four spots from their No. 28 ranking in 2025.
Kahler reported that the Steelers received low grades in multiple categories, including owner Art Rooney II ranking last for "willingness to invest in facilities."
Additionally, the Steelers' Acrisure Stadium was the "lowest-rated home field in the league," with players pointing to "excessive wear" from high school and colleges playing their games there.
To make matters worse, the Steelers' locker room received an F grade, with players claiming it has "only five bathroom stalls for the entire team."
Kahler continued that the Steelers' training room and strength coaches were also areas criticized.
Steelers senior director of communications Burt Lauten told ESPN that the team wouldn't comment on a report they haven't "seen in its entirety."
For up-to-date Steelers coverage, including any offseason moves, follow us on X @TheSteelersWire and give our Facebook page a like.
While many are campaigning to get a spot on the UFC's highly talked-about event at the White House, some others are not.
Brandon Moreno, a former UFC flyweight champion, was asked on Wednesday at the UFC Fight Night 268 media day if he'd like to participate in that event, should he beat Lone'er Kavanagh this Saturday, and be able to make a quick return to competition. The Mexican fighter was visibly bothered by the question and gave the reporter a quick response.
"Brother, tell me why would I want to fight there?" Moreno said in Spanish. "It's motivating for who? You? I'm not interested at all, thank you."
Moreno (23-9-2 MMA, 11-6-2 UFC) takes on Kavanagh (9-1 MMA, 2-1 UFC) in the main event of UFC Fight Night 268 in a five-round bout. This is his first fight of 2026, and he hopes this is the first of many. Moreno saw a two-fight winning streak come to an end this past December against Tatsuro Taira, slowing down his plans to regain the belt at 125 pounds. Moreno wants to fight often, so he can get back to title contention as soon as possible.
"Look, this fight for me, and this was also a reason why I never thought about pulling out, was because I want to star in the conversation and I want to stay relevant," Moreno explained. "I'm someone that tries to stay focused on the opponent ahead, which in this case is Lone'r, but I'm very aware that this year I want to be very active. I want to win, come out unscathed, and raise my hand to get a return as quickly as possible. My mind and body are aligned right now, and I think I can make it happen."
Shams Charania: The return: Taj Gibson has agreed on a deal with the Memphis Grizzlies, Mark Bartelstein of @PrioritySports tells ESPN. At 40 years old, Gibson is back in the NBA for his 17th season – a big man regarded as a consummate leader and professional over his career.
They often say the NFL is a "copy cat" league, where each team is desperately seeking the "next" version of whatever has been working. Right now, the Seattle Seahawks are the talk of the town as Super Bowl LX champions... especially their quarterback, Sam Darnold.
Cast aside years ago, and perennially labeled a "bust" or constantly questioned, Darnold proved everyone wrong by helping guide the Seahawks to their second-ever Lombardi trophy. Darnold showed the league that young quarterbacks who flame out elsewhere can still reclaim their career, given the right opportunity. Now, this has teams questioning all sorts of previously held beliefs regarding certain players. The NFL is likely on the search for the next "Sam Darnold."
Football talk show host and analyst Rich Eisen recently spoke how he believes another quarterback under the tutelage of Kyle Shanahan might be the next to make this sort of leap: Mac Jones.
"Mac Jones, in my estimation, is the most likely candidate to be the next Sam Darnold of anybody else."
—@richeisen on Mac Jones' potential after being under the Kyle Shanahan system 👀
The comparison makes sense. Jones didn't fall out quite as hard as Darnold did, but his tenure in New England came to an unceremonious end with multiple benching's. Jones started seven games in Jacksonville last season, where he went 2-5, had eight touchdown passes against eight interceptions. However, he may have extended his career with strong play for the Niners this past season. In relief of the injured Brock Purdy, Jones went 5-3 as a starter in San Francisco, throwing for 2,151 yards, 13 touchdowns and only six interceptions.
Jones is under contract with the Niners for another season, but that could make him incredibly attractive for an NFL team to take a chance on him. Trade for him, see what he can do, and if it's anything worthwhile, sign him to another short term deal.
Whatever the case may be, Sam Darnold's success with the Seahawks in 2025 is going to get plenty of other "cast-off" quarterbacks a second or even third look.
Speculation around Jurgen Klopp's role with Red Bull is dismissed, Chelsea remain in pole position to land Murillo and Wolves' asking price for Mateus Mane is putting off Liverpool and Manchester United.
Reports that Jurgen Klopp will leave his role as head of global soccer at the Red Bull organisation are "complete nonsense and totally unfounded", says CEO Oliver Mintzlaff. (Sky Sports Germany - in German)
Liverpool are firmly in the frame for Nottingham Forest's 23-year-old Brazil defender Murillo, although Chelsea still lead the pursuit. (Teamtalk)
Serbia international Dusan Vlahovic favours a switch to Barcelona when his Juventus contract ends this summer, although Tottenham Hotspur and Chelsea remain in the hunt to sign the 26-year-old forward. (Teamtalk)
Arsenal and Manchester City are considering bids of £30m for Atalanta left-back Honest Ahanor. Chelsea are also interested in the 18-year-old Nigerian. (Caught Offside)
Liverpool and Manchester United will not pay Wolves' £50m asking price for 18-year-old England youth international Mateus Mane this summer as they consider the midfielder too raw. (Football Insider)
Former Brentford striker Ivan Toney is targeting silverware in Saudi Arabia with current club Al-Ahli, but the Englishman, 29, is not ruling out a return to the Premier League. (Talksport)
Forward Nicolas Jackson is set to return to Chelsea. The 24-year-old Senegal international moved to Bayern Munich on loan last summer, but the Bundesliga champions are not keen on a permanent switch. (CFBayernInsider)
Newcastle United are looking at Brighton's Netherlands goalkeeper Bart Verbruggen and Manchester City's English stopper James Trafford, both 23, as they target finding a long-term successor for England international Nick Pope, 33. (The i Newspaper - subscription required)
Newcastle United are also watching Union Saint-Gilloise winger Anan Khalaili. The 21-year-old Israel international has scored three times in the Champions League this season. (Mail+ - subscription required)
Liverpool's 19-year-old winger Trent Kone-Doherty, from Northern Ireland, might soon leave to join Norwegian club Molde despite being offered a new contract at Anfield. (Football Insider)
Napoli inserted a clause in the deal of Nigeria striker Victor Osimhen's switch to Galatasaray which means the Turkish club will have to pay them up to £60m if they sell the 27-year-old to an Italian club. (Gazzetta dello Sport - in Italian)
INDIANAPOLIS -- Pacers forward Obi Toppin will be available for Thursday's game against the Hornets for the first time since he was diagnosed with a stress fracture in his right foot after the season's third game in late October, coach Rick Carlisle said in his pre-game press conference.
Carlisle said Toppin will be on a minutes restriction and will be on one for the rest of the game.
Toppin averaged 14.0 points per game in the season's first three games after averaging 10.5 per game last season when the Pacers reached the NBA Finals for the first time in 25 years.
Northern Ireland's Josh Rock says it was a "special" feeling to hit his first Premier League nine-darter at Belfast's SSE Arena on Thursday.
The 24-year-old from Broughshane in County Antrim lost his quarter-final 6-2 to Gian van Veen of the Netherlands, but picked up a set of 18ct gold darts worth £30,000 for his perfect leg.
It was the 22nd nine-darter in the competition's history and Rock said achieving the feat more than made up for his exit on the night.
"Being from Northern Ireland and hitting a nine-darter in front of Belfast is phenomenal," Rock told BBC Sport NI's Thomas Kane.
"My consistency in the Premier League is good but tonight, the 6-2 (defeat) I don't even care. I've hit a nine-darter in front of my home crowd and enjoyed that even more.
"When it [ninth dart] left my hand and the double 12 went in, I just thought 'I've hit a nine-darter in Belfast'. My body is still shaking; I had to shake my shoulders to calm myself down, but I'm buzzing.
"Nine-darters don't come around too often, but to hit one in the Premier League in Belfast - what a feeling."
Rock is without a win in his Premier League debut season, losing 6-2 in each of his four matches and admitted he was feeling the pressure in front of his home fans.
However, he is hopeful his nine-darter in Belfast can act as a catalyst for the rest of the season.
"I hope this gives me the belief to push on for the rest of the Premier League," he added.
"I know what I can do and tonight, I didn't feel the pressure, but when I stood on that stage I felt added pressure and just wanted to perform. When I hit the first 180 and second 180, I just thought 'please hit this for everybody', and I did.
"To be classed as one of the leading players in the PDC and the world is a great feeling. From a Northern Ireland perspective, there's not a lot of us in the world but to do that in front of the home crowd is massive."
Entering this week, it looked as though the USC women’s basketball team might have finally figured things out. While Sunday’s loss to Ohio State was disappointing, the Trojans had won six in a row prior to that, and put up a strong fight against a top ten opponent.
Hence, Wednesday’s matchup with Penn State, one of the worst teams in the Big Ten, was supposed to be an easy victory. The task at hand for the Women of Troy was simple: get in, win the game, get out without an my injuries, and get ready for Sunday’s massive rivalry matchup with No. 2 UCLA.
Well, mission failed. USC let the matchup become a trap game and somehow fell 85-82 to a Penn State team that entered the contest with just three Big Ten wins.
USC’s season is not over. The Trojans will still get their shot at UCLA on Sunday, followed by the Big Ten and NCAA Tournaments. But how can we expect the Women of Troy to compete with some of the best teams in the country when they could not even beat one of the worst?
At this point in the season, time is not on USC’s side. Lindsay Gottlieb and company must go back to the drawing board and get things figured out quickly, or else the Trojans will not be playing very deep into March this year.
CBS Sports moved the Florida Gators to a No. 2 seed following Wednesday night's win over the Texas Longhorns,
Bracketology experts David Cobb and Jacob Fetner made the Orange and Blue the focus of their Thursday update, noting the Gators' strong finish against the Longhorns all but guaranteed the seeding change. Florida has trended upward over the last couple of weeks, and dominating the final eight minutes of Wednesday's game helped UF secure its spot with three regular-season games left to play.
"It appeared the Gators were headed for a fight to the finish. That would have been a rarity for a Florida team that has largely rolled through its SEC schedule," Cobb wrote. "But what happened next illustrated why the Gators are trending up to the No. 2 seed line in CBS Sports Bracketology and why they should be feared as a legitimate contender to repeat as national champions."
The Gators ended things on a 23-7 run, winning by double-digits. Florida kept scoring, and Texas's offense disappeared in the clutch.
"It was a stretch of nearly perfect basketball that should serve as a warning shot to the rest of college basketball," wrote Cobb. "The Gators are coming."
Cobb pointed to Florida's improved 3-point shooting as the key difference maker. Florida made 10 or more buckets from deep just twice in its first 23 games. The Gators have done it three times in the last five games, even with an 8-for-18 performance against the Longhorns. A 44.4% night from three was a distant dream at the beginning of the season, but Todd Golden's group has gotten there.
Florida has remained in the top 15 of the KenPom efficiency ratings all season long, but expected values don't always lead to the predicted outcome. Early-season losses to projected No. 1 seeds Arizona, Duke and UConn put Florida in catch-up mode. The Gators have finally caught up, reaching the No. 7 ranking in wins above bubble, a key metric when it comes to deciding seeding for the NCAA Tournament.
"Now the question is whether there's enough runway left for Florida to creep into the No. 1 seed conversation," Cobb said. "... The Gators finally have top-eight results-based metrics to pair with top-five predictive metrics. The push for a repeat is in full swing."
It won't be easy to overtake any of those three teams mentioned above for a No. 1 seed, and Michigan has looked like a national championship contender all year. Still, Florida is making a case.
Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.StoryBlock
Nelly Korda won the season opener but hasn't played on the LPGA since. But now we know the next two times Korda plans to see it up.
The LPGA is in midst of a three-tournament Asian swing, but Korda will be competing in the first two events when the tour returns stateside.
Korda has committed to the Fortinet Founders Cup at Sharon Heights Golf & Country Club, March 19-22, in Menlo Park, California, and the Ford Championship, March 26-29, at Whirlwind Golf Club, Cattail Course in Chandler, Arizona.
Korda won in Orlando on Feb. 1 to kick off 2026. It'll be about seven weeks in between competitive rounds for her. She didn't win in 2025 after earning seven victories in 2024, including four in a row that spring. Her win at the 2024 Ford was the second of those four straight (but at a different golf course).
World No. 1 Jeeno Thitikul is also signed up to play both the Fortinet and the Ford. Korda and Thitikul won the first two events of the LPGA's 2026 season, the first time in the 20-year history the Rolex rankings the Nos. 1 and 2 players won the first two tournaments of a season.
Third-ranked Charley Hull is not on the list for the Fortinet but is set to play in Arizona at the Ford.
The Los Angeles Rams were aggressive in retaining key players in 2025, and they could do the same to kick off the 2026 offseason.
L.A. reportedly "hopes to extend the contract of tackle Warren McClendon Jr.," according to NFL reporter Tony Pauline. McClendon Jr., a 2023 fifth-round pick, had a breakout season in 2025 when he started 10 games for the injured Rob Havenstein. The 24-year-old had the lowest pressure rate allowed among right tackles this past season at just 2.94%.
McClendon Jr. should be in the driver's seat to keep the starting right tackle spot after Havenstein retired based on his 2025 performance. However, he only has one year left on his rookie deal and will be a free agent after the 2026 if the Rams don't re-sign him.
It's unclear what that deal would look like for McClendon Jr., considering he only started five games in his career before his breakout 2025 season. For reference, left tackle Alaric Jackson signed a three-year, $57 million deal with $35 million guaranteed before the 2025 season. Jackson, though, was the Rams full-time starter for two full seasons before he earned his new contract.
If the Rams re-sign McClendon Jr. or plan to extend him before the 2026 draft, it could alter their strategy for the first round. Many experts predict L.A. will draft a right tackle to either start or take over if McClendon Jr. leaves after 2026. But if McClendon Jr. signs a big extension, L.A. can look elsewhere in the first round.
Tries: Keighran, French, Field 2, Smith 2, Eckersley, Nsemba, Forber Goals: Keighran 9
Leigh (0) 0
Wigan Warriors ran in nine tries to hammer local rivals Leigh Leopards 54-0 and continue their impressive start to the 2026 Super League season.
Tries from Adam Keighran, Bevan French, Jai Field and Harry Smith put Wigan into a dominant 24-point lead at half-time for the second match in a row.
Further tries from Field and Smith plus one each from Zach Eckersley, Junior Nsemba and Tom Forber after the break - as well as nine goals from Keighran on a perfect night with the boot - ensured a third league win from three for Warriors.
Leigh failed to show up during a very one-sided 'Battle of the Borough' on a disappointing night for the visitors littered with handling errors and a lack of discipline.
Wigan went ahead after 10 minutes - French fired in a short pass for Keighran to cross over from close range on the last tackle after Leigh's Lachlan Lam conceded a set of six in his own half for a late shot.
Liam Marshall dotted down for Warriors soon after but the celebrations were cut short as referee Liam Moore spotted a forward pass from French in the build-up of a flowing team move.
French then found a small gap in the Leigh backline on the right edge to roll challenges from Lam and Tesi Niu to grab Wigan's second in a dominant opening 20 minutes from the hosts.
A well-measured kick from Smith was batted back one-handed by Nsemba to full-back Field who showed a dummy before darting over for the impressive Warriors' third try.
Field turned from scorer to provider moments later, finding room in midfield before setting up Smith to dot down underneath the sticks and, after Keighran dispatched a fourth successful kick, the game was effectively over as a contest by the half-hour mark.
Moments into the second period, Leigh's Matt Davis was forced off with a head injury having taken the full force of a kick to the corner by Smith.
And Warriors stretched their legs soon after when a beautiful line break from Patrick Mago allowed the prop to pass to Smith, who unselfishly found Field to finish another free-flowing move for his second of the night.
At this stage, Wigan were playing exhibition rugby league and a miss-out pass from French cut out three Leigh defenders and found Eckersley who strolled in for Wigan's sixth try.
Nsemba then got his name on the scoresheet, getting on the end of a delicate grubber kick from Smith, before Field raced away on a wonderful break and found the supporting Smith to dive over next to the sticks.
Hooker Forber got 50-up for Warriors, barging over for his side's ninth try between the sticks before Keighran added the extras once more to seal a perfect night for Wigan.
Leigh were dealt a further blow with just a minute remaining as full-back Bailey Hodgson had to be helped off the field with a serious looking knee injury.
Welcome to Atlanta, where the players play and the gentlemen's clubs have the best wings in town.
The Atlanta Hawks are leaning into the city's famed hip-hop culture and history, featuring what the team is calling an "iconic cultural institution" that's definitely NSFW in an upcoming promotional night.
The team announced Wednesday it will collaborate with prominent Atlanta strip club Magic City for a one-night only, in-game celebration of hip-hop called "Magic City Monday" against the Orlando Magic on March 16.
“From the food to the music and the exclusive merchandise, we are excited to team up with Magic City to create an authentic, True to Atlanta-inspired game experience,” Hawks Executive Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer Melissa Proctor said in a news release.
Magic City Kitchen will serve two versions of their "world famous" lemon pepper wings, Louwill Lemon Pepper BBQ, named after Atlanta-native and three-time NBA Sixth Man of the Year-winner Lou Williams.
The Hawks' celebration of "Magic City Monday" doesn't stop at wings. Atlanta rapper and entrepreneur T.I. is expected to perform at halftime.
Being that Tip is back home in Atlanta, at the State Farm Arena, it'll be interesting to see if he'll perform any recent cuts including diss tracks toward rapper and entrepreneur Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson.
Keeping it so ATL, the organization tabbed native DJ Esco to provide the pregame tunes.
Before the game, ticketed fans will have a chance to view a recording of the Hawks AF Podcast featuring a conversation with Magic City founder Michael “Mr. Magic” Barney and T.I., hosted by comedian D.C. Young Fly, another Atlanta native.
“We doin’ this one for the city ... Magic City,” T.I. said in a news release.
Why is Magic City famous?
Magic City has become influential not only in Atlanta but as a tourist stop for those who visit the city. Ask NBA players who have a road game against the Hawks about the lore of Magic City wings.
Williams famously couldn't help but visit the spot for its wings in 2020 when he was excused from the NBA Bubble in Orlando to attend a funeral, while everyone was social distancing due to the spread of the COVID-19 virus.
The moment went viral after a photo he snapped with rapper Jack Harlow during the visit that was posted to social media.
"We had our masks on, I thought we did it how we were supposed to do it," Williams said, explaining the incident during a June 2025 episode of Gil's Arena, a podcast hosted by former NBA player Gilbert Arenas with Nick Young, Kenyon Martin, Rashad McCants and Josiah Johnson.
He continued: "I want to put this to bed. I didn't sneak out the bubble to go to Magic City. They excused me from the bubble to go to a funeral. ...The funeral home was a block away from Magic [City]. I've been staying in a hotel [in the NBA bubble in Orlando] eating hotel room service food. Magic got good food, this is my hometown and if you know ATL, we eat in our strip clubs. That's where you can find the best food."
Williams received a 10-day quarantine for violating safety protocols but maintains that the league's focus was on him going to a strip club rather than his real reason for going – the food.
The incident did two things: birthed the nickname "Lemon Pepper Lou" and also cemented Magic City's kitchen's place as the stuff of NBA and Atlanta legend.
But long before Williams's visit, the site was a landmark for Atlanta and its visitors, which is the focus of the documentary "Magic City: An American Fantasy" that discusses the impact of the club on Atlanta music, sports and culture through interviews with Atlanta rappers Big Boi, Killer Mike and T.I., along with other celebrities and artists who they discuss its role in hip-hop and Black culture.
He might not have been able to secure the win vs. the Denver Nuggets for the Boston Celtics by himself this past Wednesday (Feb. 25) night, but Celtics point guard Derrick White has been impressive for Boston this season, and even Nuggets coach David Adelman admitted as much ahead of the tilt his team would win 103-84.
"One thing he does is he plays the same way every night," said Adelman of White's consistency. "And there's a lot to be said for that. And I think, from the San Antonio (Spurs) days, it's incredible when he came in the league how much you just went under everything with him. He's going to drive the ball with his right hand – that's what he does."
"And he just turned himself into a confident 3-point shooter," he added. "That makes you have to make a decision nightly because if he does get downhill, he's so effective."
"I think he's over a block a game for a guard," continued the Denver coach. "Just a complete basketball player. That trade really worked out for them and he just compliments whoever he plays with so well."
"It's funny he used to be in our gym in the summers and he's back home playing pickup. And just to see where his career has gone, it's (made him) a very well-deserved, just a really good all-around basketball player."
Colorado Buffaloes defensive pass rush coordinator Warren Sapp will not return for the 2026 season, Brandon Krisztal reports. He coached with the Buffaloes for three seasons beginning in 2023 under head coach Deion Sanders.
Sapp had a decorated career in the NFL spanning 13 seasons with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Oakland Raiders. He registered 578 tackles, 96.5 sacks and 91 tackles for loss from his defensive tackle position, earning him four first-team All-Pro selections. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2013, the first player in Buccaneers history to do so.
Multiple reports suggest that Sapp didn't see a coaching career after playing, but was hired by Sanders in 2023 to lead the defensive line and pass rush unit.
During his tenure, the Buffaloes finished 63rd (2023), 16th (2024) and 129th (2025) in total sacks, with production making a clear downturn last season as Colorado struggled through a 3-9 campaign and a 15th place finish in the Big 12.
Sapp's departure comes just days after Colorado defensive coordinator Robert Livingston was hired away by the Denver Broncos and Chris Marve, who was formerly the linebackers coach, was promoted to replace Livingston.
Nick Caserio might be in the market for a quarterback one day soon, but could simply just take on over as QB1 for 2026?
One would argue that his accuracy is better than C.J. Stroud's with just a single throw.
Caserio appeared on ESPN's "Pat McAfee Show" live from the Lucas Oil Stadium at the NFL Scouting Combine and was tasked his throwing a ball through a hole for the charity of his choosing. The only caveat? It had to be a sprial.
Well Caserio, a former quarterback at John Carroll University, had to show the crew that not only does his team own McAfee's Indianapolis Colts twice a season, but he also still has enough left in the tank to drop jaws and look the part of competent signal-caller.
Here's a clip of Caserio drilling the target on live televison.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
CROSWELL — At Port Huron High School, the girls basketball program dates to at least 1905.
That's an awful lot of history. And Mariah Turner just made some more.
With a 3-pointer at the 5:41 mark of the second quarter, she broke the Red Hawks' single-season scoring record during a game against Croswell-Lexington on Thursday, Feb. 26.
The previous record of 429 points was set by Kesha Bradford in the 1997 season, when MHSAA girls basketball was a fall sport.
After Turner's triple, which gave her 431 points on the season, Port Huron promptly called a full timeout so the senior guard could celebrate with her teammates. Cros-Lex athletic director Jeff Kosal announced the achievement to the crowd, which was met with applause.
Both Illinois and Indiana advanced their respective bills in an effort to lure the Chicago Bears out of the city.
Illinois lawmakers don't return to Springfield for another two-plus weeks, but they say talks with the Bears continue. Meanwhile, Indiana leaders are looking to close the deal.
The House Public Finance Committee advanced the bill Thursday that would freeze property taxes for mega projects like a Bears stadium in Arlington Heights.
But members of the Illinois House of Representatives adjourned without voting on the bill Thursday. They will not return to Springfield until March 18.
The state of Illinois has thus far failed to commit to infrastructure improvements and property tax certainty, and the Bears have not committed to where they want the team to go.
An amendment from Chicago-area state Rep. Kam Buckner outlines tax breaks on infrastructure the state would provide to entice the Bears to build in Arlington Heights, where the McCaskey family already owns the old Arlington Racetrack.
"I do you want the team to stay in Illinois. That's very important to me," Buckner said.
Illinois lawmakers say they're not in competition with Indiana. They say they are moving at their own pace.
"We're operating in our lane, and I think the Bears will see we are moving in the right direction," Buckner said.
Gov. JB Pritzker spoke about the battle over the Bears on MS NOW.
"I am not going to be shaken down, and I have set out some very clear guidelines. And my guidelines are we are not going to fleece the taxpayers of the state of Illinois. We are not going to let the Bears do that," Pritzker said.
The full House needs to approve the bill before Pritzker would sign it.
Arlington Heights residents and some Bears fans showed up in Springfield Thursday.
"The Bears belong in Illinois, period. George Stanley Halas would be turning over in his grave if he knew they would even get out of the city of Chicago let alone the state of Illinois," Bears fan Marty Tadla said. "It's the pride and joy of Illinois, Chicago Bears on the lakefront."
Some opponents disagree, however. They believe the bill would be bad for taxpayers.
"This is likely the riskiest economic development program ever seriously propose, not just in Illinois history but in U.S. history," said Brian Costin, with Americans for Prosperity.
The revised mega-project bill was supposed to be heard last week, but got canceled at the last minute.
Arlington Heights Mayor Jim Tinaglia said in a statement, "Thank you to our State Leadership, the Chicago Bears, and all of the local and regional partners who helped the Mega Projects Bill reach this important milestone. Based on the feedback we are receiving, we are very optimistic that the necessary support will be present for the Bill to pass both the Senate and House and advance to the Governor's desk in the coming weeks. We look forward to continuing our work with the team and state leadership to advance this project. Let's stay focused and keep our Pride and Joy in Illinois!"
Chicago's chief financial officer was on hand Thursday to throw a "Hail Mary" pass to try to get Chicago back into the consideration. But it seemed to fall incomplete.
"This is a wake up call. Chicago is losing them. They're not even in the running anymore. This is between the burbs and another state," said Li Arellano, a Republican representing Dixon.
In Indiana, the state Senate passed a bill for a new Chicago Bears stadium in Hammond near Wolf Lake, 45-4.
"In Lake County, when one city rises, the entire region rises. This legislation positions Indiana, not as a spectator in economic competition, but as a contender," said state Sen. Mark Spencer, a Democrat representing Gary, Indiana.
Gov. Mike Braun said on X Thursday afternoon he signed the bill.
We made it clear from the beginning that Indiana is open for business. I’m thrilled to sign Senate Bill 27 to create the framework to build a new world-class stadium in Northwest Indiana. Now let’s get this across the goal line. pic.twitter.com/XTRFVTf1yl
"We made it clear from the beginning that Indiana is open for business. I'm thrilled to sign Senate Bill 27 to create the framework to build a new world-class stadium in Northwest Indiana," he said. "Now let's get this across the goal line."
Before signing the bill, a confident Governor Braun appeared on ESPN's "Pat McAfee Show."
"Reasonable regulation, taxes, high wages, low cost of living. What more would you want?" Braun said.
Hammond Mayor Thomas M. McDermott Jr. said, "I want to congratulate Governor Braun for signing into law Senate Bill 27 that sets up the framework to bring the Chicago Bears to Hammond and Northwest Indiana. This is a historic day for our state. The Bears have witnessed over the past several months how efficient government works. From the statehouse to city hall, Indiana continues to be ready to get to work and make Northwest Indiana the Bears new home."
"We would be honored to welcome the McCaskey family and Mr. Ryan to our partnership here," said Indiana state Sen. Ryan Mishler, a Republican representing Mishawaka.
The city of Chicago is still technically in the running to keep the Bears.
The Bears said in a statement, "Indiana has taken important steps over the last few months, and we are grateful for the leadership reflected by Governor Braun signing SB 27, establishing the framework for a stadium development in Northwest Indiana. We continue to work on the necessary due diligence and appreciate the ongoing engagement with Indiana state and local leaders."
Throughout most of the first three quarters of the Boston Celtics 103-84 loss to the Denver Nuggets, the Celtics were able to keep the game close despite shooting just 28% from beyond the arc and 35% from the field overall. But the Nuggets broke the game open vs. a tired Boston squad to secure the victory on their own home court of Ball Arena this past Wednesday (Feb. 25) night.
After the loss, star Celtics forward Jaylen Brown weighed in on what went sideways for his team in the defeat, saying "I think we just had a tough time tonight converting. I thought we got a lot of great looks, some open catch issues, and we just didn't convert."
"So, move on to the next tough night shooting the ball," he added. "The physicality was pretty good tonight, but I thought we just didn't convert on the offensive end, that spilled over the defense a little bit."
"Every night is an opportunity to learn, so definitely some takeaways from tonight," said Brown, taking a positive tack from the loss. "They're a good team. I thought we put ourselves in a good position. We've just got to convert."
"I feel like offensively, I think we had like 84, 85 points, but I thought we had a bunch of open looks. And we've just got to stick them and trust our guys to shoot it confidently. And then also, I think we gave them a couple more extra chance points than we would have liked on the glass. But other than that, I thought we competed."
Former Celtic non-executive director Lord Willie Haughey plans to set up a new fans' trust, and has promised to pay for £2m worth of shares for every 10,000 fans that sign up.
The Glasgow businessman has long been a diehard Celtic fan and plans to launch the "Season Ticket Alliance" to help mend the relationship between supporters and the club's board.
"Over the last few months I've been looking at what's going on," he told Go Radio in an interview. "If you've not got harmony in a business, you've got no chance.
"Some of the stuff has been a distraction over the past few months. After last week and the fantastic atmosphere at the stadium to be killed in two minutes, we need to come up with a better solution for how the fans can get a voice."
Fan protests have become the norm at Celtic Park this season, with supporters disgruntled at a perceived lack of spending in recent transfer windows, plus the failed appointment of Wilfried Nancy as manager.
"I'm going to look at setting something up. I believe that the 54,000 season tickets holders are the core, they're the heartbeat of Celtic.
"I'm going to set up a thing called the 'Season Ticket Alliance'. I'm going to pay for it, I'm not looking for money from anybody.
"What I'm offering is, for every 10,000 fans that join us, I'll put £2m in to buy shares for this trust.
"If we take all the shares of the people who join through the trust, if everyone joins, that's £10m. They will be gifted to the trust. It won't be owned by me.
"I think we have to get something that all the fans can get behind. Let's get harmony, let's get the Green Brigade back in the stadium. Let's get everyone singing from the same hymn sheet."
Lord Haughey also revealed that he plans to get an ex-player involved, and aims to have a fan on the board if his plan is successful.
"I'm going to get a Celtic legend to front it, I've got that done," he said. "Hopefully in the next few weeks there'll be more details.
"The long-term play is to get enough people behind us that we can go to the club and this should be the vehicle as to how the fans can get their viewpoint over to the club.
"Maybe even potentially in years to come, we can get someone from the fanbase onto the board."
Wisconsin basketball (19-9, 11-6 Big Ten) suffered its sixth conference loss of the 2025-26 campaign on Wednesday night against the Oregon Ducks, who entered the bout with a 10-17 mark.
After securing a Quad 1 win over the Iowa Hawkeyes (NCAA NET No. 26) on Feb. 22, the Badgers added a Quad 2 loss to the Ducks, who sit at No. 15 in an 18-team Big Ten conference. Entering the game on Wednesday in Eugene, Oregon, UW sat one game out of position for a double-bye in the Big Ten Tournament.
The defeat essentially eliminated Greg Gard's group from contention. Considering Michigan, Nebraska, Illinois, Michigan State, and Purdue's conference records, Wisconsin would require an unlikely set of circumstances to climb back into the top-tier cohort.
Wisconsin does, however, boast wins over the then-No. 2-ranked Wolverines, No. 8 Fighting Illini and No. 10 Spartans. Those carry weight in UW's Quad 1 resume, which serves as an important ingredient for NCAA Tournament seeding over the next few weeks.
Wisconsin basketball's updated NCAA NET ranking after Oregon loss
Ranking: No. 34 overall (down two)
Resume: 19-9 overall, 5-7 vs. Quad 1, 6-2 vs. Quad 2, 2-0 vs. Quad 3, 6-0 vs. Quad 4
The results are in. Rueben Bain Jr.'s arms measured in at 30 7/8 inches at the 2026 NFL combine, tied as the third-shortest among edge rushers since 1999, according to MockDraftable's database.
However, according to Bain, this hasn't been a concern of teams he's talked to. "I will just talk the talk and walk the walk … Nobody is really asking me about it," the Miami Hurricanes star said at the combine.
A projected early first-round pick, Bain's 20.5 sacks and 33.5 tackles for loss over 38 career games at the U might be why teams don't seem to be putting much stock into his arm length. At least not yet. Of course, that hasn't stopped social media from getting these memes off. Not all are bad, but the short-arm jokes are everywhere.
Eleven years ago, a young Harry Westlake went viral.
After winning a competition to be an England mascot, he spent the days running up to England's meeting with Italy learning the words to the national anthem.
Standing in front of then England captain Chris Robshaw, the six-year-old certainly took his chance.
Fist clenched over his heart, Westlake belted out God Save the Queen with such gusto, that images were shared widely across the internet, spawning a hashtag #DoItLikeHarry.
A couple of days later, a little more tired and quiet, Harry was interviewed on BBC Breakfast. Midway through the chat, presenter Naga Munchetty asked him: "One day will we see you on the pitch singing as one of the players?"
This April, we just might.
Westlake (bottom right) became a viral star for his heartfelt rendition of the national anthem [Getty Images]
Now 17, Westlake has been included in an England training camp in preparation for April's U18 Six Nations Festival in Vichy, France.
"England Rugby was always a massive thing for me growing up," says Westlake, looking back.
"I just loved England and I'm very patriotic.
"I remember getting into the tunnel and asking Chris Robshaw if he was ready.
"Then we cracked on, went out and I think I thought I was going to play!
"You see me walking out and almost staring everyone down.
"Before it, my mum had said to me, 'Make sure you sing it loud and sing it proud'.
"So I just thought, 'All right, I'll do that'."
Westlake was playing for Devonport Services under-7s at the time, but already had his eyes on the big stage, with plans to become England fly-half or centre.
That part probably won't come to pass.
Westlake, who plays in Exeter's academy, is now a hard-running back row, channelling the energy and drive of Ben Earl and Henry Pollock, even if he does cite childhood hero Owen Farrell as the embodiment of the mentality he aspires to.
Westlake has already had to show resilience to keep pursuing his dream.
"Rugby has always been the focus, even if the ride hasn't necessarily been as smooth as it could have been," he says.
Westlake has Crohn's disease, a chronic gut inflammation.
"I'm on medication which I take every eight weeks, which sort of ticks me over and gets me through," he explains.
"There was a two, three, four-year period where it was pretty tough, but we're getting through it now.
"It affects energy levels so for two or three days before my medication is due, I'll struggle and then a day after I'll struggle as well."
Harry's anthem moment was not his even his first experience meeting the England squad.
After using an image of Harry on father Kevin's shoulders at a match the previous year in publicity material, the Rugby Football Union (RFU) had brought both into the team hotel to meet the players and coach Stuart Lancaster.
An image of a five-year-old Harry on father Kevin's shoulders was used in RFU publicity material in 2014 [Getty Images]
After his viral rendition of the anthem, Harry, decked out in a black suit, even hosted his own online mini chat show with England internationals Dylan Hartley, Luther Burrell and Kieran Brookes as guests.
Are any of his new age-grade team-mates aware of his brief childhood burst of rugby fame?
"The core group of friends I have now, I've been friends with since I was about six, seven, eight anyway," says Westlake. "So they all know and share the clips - it gets around.
"But no, I don't think any of the England Under-18s know about it yet."
If they haven't seen the recorded version, Westlake is determined they get to hear him sing live.
"I'd love to be playing in a [senior] England shirt in five years' time," he says.
"I think that's everyone's goal who's in this camp at the minute to progress through the pathway and become an England player eventually.
"I've already thought about the anthem. If I get the chance, then definitely I'll give it some - 100%."
Florida basketball (22-6, 13-2) reached a new season high of No. 6 on the NET rankings after defeating the Texas Longhorns on Wednesday night.
Florida started at No. 33 in the initial NET rankings at the end of November and slowly climbed into the top 10 by early February. Now the Gators are eyeing a top-five berth with three regular-season games left on the schedule. Two of Florida's six losses have come against top-three programs, and three have come against top-nine programs.
During the current eight-game win streak, Florida has won all but one contest (vs. Kentucky) by double digits, averaging a 20.5-point margin of victory. Five of those wins have come against Quadrant 1 opponents, leading to Florida's steady climb up the rankings.
The Gators are the only SEC team ranked inside the top 15, with Vanderbilt being the next closest at No. 17. Arkansas, Alabama and Tennessee control the Nos. 18-20 spots in the latest update.
Two of Florida's three remaining regular-season games are against Quadrant 1 teams, including Saturday's home contest against Arkansas. The Gators close out the schedule with a Q3 matchup against Mississippi State at home and the season finale at Kentucky.
Breaking down Florida’s wins by Quadrant
Before going into Florida’s resume, it’s important to understand how the quadrants are divided. Where a game is played has as much to do with the quadrant as the quality of the opponent. As the rankings change, so does the quality of the wins.
Quadrant 1: Home 1-30, Neutral 1-50, Away 1-75
Quadrant 2: Home 31-75, Neutral 51-100, Away 76-135
Quadrant 3: Home 76-160, Neutral 101-200, Away 135-240
Quadrant 4: Home 161-353, Neutral 201-353, Away 241-353
Quadrant 1 Games
Florida is 9-5 in Quadrant 1 games. The Auburn Tigers are the only team with more Quadrant 1 games played (15), but they are 5-11 in such games. Five teams are tied with Florida's 14 Quadrant 1 games, but Arizona is the only one with a better record at 12-2. Duke and Michigan each have 11 Q1 wins this season.
Non-conference losses came against No. 1 Duke, No. 3 Arizona and No. 9 UConn. All three are considered very good losses. Florida also lost to No. 46 TCU. The Gators' lone non-conference Q1 win came against No. 32 Miami at a neutral site (Jacksonville). The Hurricanes are firmly in Quadrant 1, while the Horned Frogs recently moved back within the top-50 threshold.
Several of Florida's SEC games have come against Q1 opponents. The Missouri (No. 58) loss on the road remains in Quadrant 1, which is good for the Gators, but Auburn is just outside of the top 3, dropping out of Q1 territory for games played at home.
The Q1 conference wins came against No. 17 Vanderbilt (road), No. 19 Alabama (home), No. 20 Tennessee (home), No. 29 Kentucky, No. 33 Georgia (road), No. 40 Texas, No. 42 Texas A&M (road) and No. 67 Oklahoma (road).
Quadrant 2 Games
In Quadrant 2 games, Florida is 6-1, with wins over No. 33 Georgia, No. 65 LSU — both at home — during conference play. The Gators also beat No. 93 Ole Miss and No. 108 South Carolina during conference play.
The other two Q2 wins came during the non-conference schedule against No. 77 Providence and No. 84 George Washington, both at a neutral site.
Florida's lone Quadrant 2 loss came against No. 35 Auburn at home.
Quadrant 3 and 4 games
Florida is 2-0 in Quadrant 3 games, with wins over No. 82 Florida State and No. 108 South Carolina, both at home. The Seminoles were briefly in Qudrant 2 territory earlier this week and could finish at No. 75 or better by the end of the season to return there.
Florida went 5-0 against Q4 teams, beating No. 180 Merrimack, No. 225 Colgate, No. 242 Dartmouth, No. 335 North Florida and No. 352 Saint Francis by an average of 33.6 points. Merrimack is the only one near the Quadrant 3 threshold of No. 160.
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Real Madrid has initiated proceedings to ban a fan who was caught on camera making a Nazi salute prior to Wednesday's Champions League game against Benfica.
The club said the fan was caught by television cameras ahead of the Champions League playoff second leg at the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium, which Madrid won 2-1 to reach the round of 16.
According to Real Madrid, the fan was immediately expelled from the stadium.
"Real Madrid C. F. announces that it has urgently requested the club's Disciplinary Committee to initiate an immediate expulsion procedure for the member who was caught on television cameras performing the Nazi salute in the area where the Animation Stand is located, moments before the start of the match between Real Madrid and Benfica," a club statement read.
"This member was identified by the club's security staff moments after appearing on the broadcast and was immediately expelled from the Santiago Bernabéu Stadium.
"Real Madrid condemns this type of gesture and expression that incites violence and hatred in sports and society."
Real Madrid fans unveiled a large “no to racism” banner prior to the game, a nod to the events of the previous week.
Benfica's Gianluca Prestianni was banned for the second leg after accusations that he directed a racial insult toward Real Madrid star Vinícius Jr during the first leg.
DELAND — As both teams played terrific defense Thursday during the Class 4A girls state soccer semifinals, the goal chances were few and far between. American Heritage made a free kick count and it proved to be the difference in a 1-0 victory over Bishop Moore at Spec Martin Stadium.
Bishop Moore coach Amy Geltz said the free kick, which was credited to Heritage’s Emma Torres, was actually an own-goal that caromed off the back of one of the Bishop Moore players.
“It is what it is. It’s unfortunate because I know they fought and played really hard,” Geltz said. “It’s tough, especially for the seniors. It’s their last game. But they gave it their all, so they need to hold their heads up high.”
Definitely a difficult way for Bishop Moore senior goalkeeper Elle Hage to end her high school career. She witnessed two state championships in her first two seasons at Bishop Moore, but the Hornets failed to get rings in her final two seasons.
“It’s pretty disappointing but I made more good memories to be able to get over this one. It’s a good group of girls, very young. They have a good future,” said Hage, who is still weighing her college options. “It was more hard mentally than physically. We put the work in at practice and it’s been a great season for us. The girls were great. … That’s just how it goes.”
The official scoring had three shots on goal apiece for both teams, but there were never any legitimate threats in the second half.
American Heritage attacked often in the first half, but Hage was up for the task, stepping in several times. American Heritage did not have a direct shot on goal in the opening 40 minutes with the exception of the free kick.
Bishop Moore had several opportunities in the first half, but failed to capitalize. In the early minutes of the match, a ball got loose in front of the Heritage goal but a shot by Bishop Moore’s Kennedy Boudreaux sailed high.
The fleet feet of Nikki Meletidis created an opportunity in the 38th minute. She split two Heritage defenders near midfield and then beat the another down the field, but her shot from the left side of the penalty arc was stopped by a fantastic diving save by Heritage goalie Marlee Mills.
Bishop Moore missed some other chances early in the first half when teammates failed to recognize a wide-open opposite side of the field that left Emma Booker by herself.
“They just need to get their heads up more, and it is youth,” Geltz said. “So they will. It come with more playing with each other and they’ll get used to it.”
Youth prevailed this season for Bishop Moore, which played an extremely tough schedule and ended the season 8-7-5. Despite the sub-par record, by Bishop Moore standards, the Hornets were still the No. 1-seed in their region.
Two freshmen, Johnie Hanley and Elina Martino led the team in scoring, and Bishop Moore returns six of its top seven goal scorers.
“There was a lot of great games that we played this year. There were a lot of new faces for us, a lot of young ones,” Geltz said. “I just tried to instill in them that it’s OK. Don’t look at the record. Just try to play your best and learn from your mistakes.”
League executives have spent the past month meeting with dozens of potential investors in franchises in Europe, including wealthy individuals and private equity funds. Non-binding bids for those teams are due in late March. I’m told the NBA wants franchise fees of about $1 billion, though some investor groups have balked at that number and have pushed for fees closer to $500 million. It’s possible the NBA Board of Governors could greenlight the sale of franchises in some cities, and thus the formation of the league, during its upcoming March meeting. The NBA has targeted October 2027 for the league’s debut. The NBA has held conversations with several media companies with global aspirations to broadcast the games, including Amazon and YouTube, according to sources familiar with the matter. Amazon and YouTube spokespeople declined to comment. No decision on a broadcast partner or partners has been made yet, according to an NBA spokesperson.
EUGENE, OR – Wisconsin coach Greg Gard did not ignore the uncomfortable reality facing his Badgers after an uninspiring loss to Oregon roughly three weeks ahead of the NCAA Tournament.
“When you keep playing like that, you won’t play long,” Gard said outside the visiting team locker room at Matthew Knight Arena, echoing his message to the team after the 85-71 loss on Feb. 25.
The Badgers’ loss to the Ducks – a team that is (and has been) well outside tournament contention – offered some red flags for a team with aspirations of winning March Madness games.
Gard’s group has lost its last two games away from the Kohl Center, and both have been by double-digit margins against unranked teams. The Badgers are not dealing with one or two isolated issues either.
Wisconsin fell into an early double-digit deficit against Ohio State – as it has in several of its Big Ten games – and the defense could not muster enough stops to give the Badgers a realistic chance to claw back.
Then against Oregon, Wisconsin’s offense was out of sorts in seemingly every way. The Badgers did not generate anything in the interior as Oregon often packed the paint, and their lackluster ball movement limited their quality of 3-point looks. It was UW’s second loss this season when leading at halftime. (The Jan. 25 loss vs. USC was the other.)
The obvious common thread between Wisconsin’s two recent losses was its defensive inconsistency. Oregon – ranking 119th in KenPom’s adjusted offensive efficiency this season – looked superb in the second half against Wisconsin’s defense. The Ducks shot 70.8% after halftime.
The Badgers rank 63rd in KenPom’s adjusted defensive efficiency. Thirteen of last year’s Sweet 16 teams finished in the top 50 in the metric, and the three exceptions – Purdue, BYU and Kentucky – had top-10 offenses. UW’s offense is 20th in adjusted offensive efficiency.
Wisconsin can take some solace in the way it has bounced back from some of its unsavory losses in Big Ten play. After losing to then-No. 6 Purdue, the Badgers rattled off five consecutive wins (including against then-No. 1 Michigan). After losing in controversial fashion to Indiana, the Badgers knocked off then-No. 7 Illinois and then-No. 10 Michigan State.
“Adversity just keeps building character,” guard Nick Boyd said. “It’s a negative. But at the same time, when you’re winning and stuff like that, sometimes we let a couple things go over your head. So just a reality check these last couple games on the road.”
Wisconsin will look for another rebound against Washington on Feb. 28. The Huskies are 6-11 in Big Ten play, but the Ducks that just beat the Badgers were previously 3-13 in Big Ten play.
“That was the beautiful thing about dropping one at Ohio State,” Boyd said. “We had an opportunity to play a great Iowa team. And I think it’s another high-level team in Washington. … So we got no time to really dwell.”
Wisconsin’s three victories over top-10 teams removed any doubt about whether the Badgers will make the 68-team tournament. The Badgers are No. 34 in the NCAA’s NET rankings and have five Quad 1 wins.
But Gard’s warning about Wisconsin possibly not playing for long may strike a nerve for the Badgers amid their current Sweet 16 drought. UW has not advanced to the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament since 2017, and UW has won only one March Madness game in the last three seasons.
“I only won one NCAA Tournament game,” Wisconsin guard John Blackwell said. “So obviously for myself and this team, guys that have been here … we want to put more under our belt.”
Wisconsin has its homework due in short time, though, before any goals are within reach just north on Interstate 5 in Portland, out east in Philadelphia or any tournament site in between.
“I think we’ll be better,” Blackwell said. “I know we’ll be better.”
EUGENE, OR – Wisconsin coach Greg Gard did not ignore the uncomfortable reality facing his Badgers after an uninspiring loss to Oregon roughly three weeks ahead of the NCAA Tournament.
“When you keep playing like that, you won’t play long,” Gard said outside the visiting team locker room at Matthew Knight Arena, echoing his message to the team after the 85-71 loss on Feb. 25.
The Badgers’ loss to the Ducks – a team that is (and has been) well outside tournament contention – offered some red flags for a team with aspirations of winning March Madness games.
Gard’s group has lost its last two games away from the Kohl Center, and both have been by double-digit margins against unranked teams. The Badgers are not dealing with one or two isolated issues either.
Wisconsin fell into an early double-digit deficit against Ohio State – as it has in several of its Big Ten games – and the defense could not muster enough stops to give the Badgers a realistic chance to claw back.
Then against Oregon, Wisconsin’s offense was out of sorts in seemingly every way. The Badgers did not generate anything in the interior as Oregon often packed the paint, and their lackluster ball movement limited their quality of 3-point looks. It was UW’s second loss this season when leading at halftime. (The Jan. 25 loss vs. USC was the other.)
The obvious common thread between Wisconsin’s two recent losses was its defensive inconsistency. Oregon – ranking 119th in KenPom’s adjusted offensive efficiency this season – looked superb in the second half against Wisconsin’s defense. The Ducks shot 70.8% after halftime.
The Badgers rank 63rd in KenPom’s adjusted defensive efficiency. Thirteen of last year’s Sweet 16 teams finished in the top 50 in the metric, and the three exceptions – Purdue, BYU and Kentucky – had top-10 offenses. UW’s offense is 20th in adjusted offensive efficiency.
Wisconsin can take some solace in the way it has bounced back from some of its unsavory losses in Big Ten play. After losing to then-No. 6 Purdue, the Badgers rattled off five consecutive wins (including against then-No. 1 Michigan). After losing in controversial fashion to Indiana, the Badgers knocked off then-No. 7 Illinois and then-No. 10 Michigan State.
“Adversity just keeps building character,” guard Nick Boyd said. “It’s a negative. But at the same time, when you’re winning and stuff like that, sometimes we let a couple things go over your head. So just a reality check these last couple games on the road.”
Wisconsin will look for another rebound against Washington on Feb. 28. The Huskies are 6-11 in Big Ten play, but the Ducks that just beat the Badgers were previously 3-13 in Big Ten play.
“That was the beautiful thing about dropping one at Ohio State,” Boyd said. “We had an opportunity to play a great Iowa team. And I think it’s another high-level team in Washington. … So we got no time to really dwell.”
Wisconsin’s three victories over top-10 teams removed any doubt about whether the Badgers will make the 68-team tournament. The Badgers are No. 34 in the NCAA’s NET rankings and have five Quad 1 wins.
But Gard’s warning about Wisconsin possibly not playing for long may strike a nerve for the Badgers amid their current Sweet 16 drought. UW has not advanced to the second weekend of the NCAA Tournament since 2017, and UW has won only one March Madness game in the last three seasons.
“I only won one NCAA Tournament game,” Wisconsin guard John Blackwell said. “So obviously for myself and this team, guys that have been here … we want to put more under our belt.”
Wisconsin has its homework due in short time, though, before any goals are within reach just north on Interstate 5 in Portland, out east in Philadelphia or any tournament site in between.
“I think we’ll be better,” Blackwell said. “I know we’ll be better.”
The Brooklyn Nets are still in the midst of the 2025-26 NBA season and at the moment, they're trying to turn their season around before April comes around. Despite the fact that Brooklyn remains focused on finishing this season in a strong fashion, it's important to note that matters after the season, like free-agency, are still being considered at this moment.
As of this writing, the Nets are projected to have at least $46 million in cap space to use in the offseason, not accounting for the fact that they would also have access to the Room Mid-level Exception (RMLE). When considering the RMLE, Brooklyn could have as much as $56 million in cap space to work with this summer, third only to the Los Angeles Lakers ($89 million) and the Chicago Bulls ($75 million).
What is important to reference is that the Nets do not have their own pick for the 2027 NBA Draft as that pick went to the Houston Rockets after Brooklyn traded draft picks with the Rockets two summers ago. That means that the Nets do not have as much of an incentive to be as committed to the rebuild heading into the 2027 Draft since Houston would ultimately be the beneficiary.
All that is to say that the Nets could be using this upcoming summer to upgrade the team as much as possible around the young players on the team, including the five rookies taken in the 2025 Draft. Forward Michael Porter Jr. ($40.8 million due to him in 2026-27) and center Nic Claxton ($23.1 million) will be the only players on the roster making more than $15 million next season.
While the recent Collective Bargaining Agreements (CBA) have changed how impactful free-agency is, there's still a possibility that the Nets could look to the market for immediate improvements. With that being said, here are five players that Brooklyn has to make contract decisions on following the conclusion of the 2025-26 campaign:
Ochai Agbaji
Agbaji has not played much for the Nets since being acquired from the Toronto Raptors via trade prior to the trade deadline, but the rest of the season will be seeing how he fits within this system. Agbaji will be a restricted free-agent after this season, but given how he has played at various points in his career, he could be an interesting player to monitor.
Ziaire Williams
Williams has had his bright spots for Brooklyn this season as he has shown more ability in his dribble-drive game while displaying the defensive tenacity that he was known for since his days with the Memphis Grizzlies. Williams has a team option for the 2026-27 season that is worth $6.25 million, but his spot in the rotation as of this writing seems to be situational.
Day'Ron Sharpe
Like he has done for the past couple of seasons, Sharpe has displayed his penchant for being ultra-productive in limited minutes while also showing his ability to be an effective starting center when Nic Claxton is out of the lineup. Sharpe, like Williams, has a $6.25 million team option for next season and given his play this season, the Nets will likely exercise that option.
Josh Minott
Similar to Agbaji, Minott will be a restricted free-agent after this season, but he has not played one second for the Nets since being acquired from the Boston Celtics prior to the deadline. Minott is available for Thursday's game against the San Antonio Spurs and with the team needing to see how he fits on this roster, he could be getting some playing time down the stretch of this campaign.
Jalen Wilson
Wilson has been lauded by head coach Jordi Fernandez for his professionalism when it comes to his role as primarily coming off the bench whenever a few rotational players are injured or when games have gotten out of hand. While acknowledging the fact that Wilson is always ready to play, he will be a restricted free-agent after this season so it'll be interesting to see how much playing time he gets towards the end of the year.
With the month of February wrapping up, the focus is shifting to March as teams get set for runs. For the North Carolina Tar Heels, they have three games left in the Atlantic Coast Conference and don't have to worry about being on the bubble this season.
For the Tar Heels, they won't leave the state of North Carolina until the NCAA Tournament as they host Virginia Tech and Clemson before taking on Duke. They then go to Charlotte for the ACC Tournament. So, a big opportunity to improve their tournament resume is ahead. And they could be getting some more good news regarding injuries.
North Carolina has been without star freshman Caleb Wilson for a few weeks after he suffered a left wrist injury in the loss to Miami. Wilson has been wearing a brace since then and was targeting the season finale at Duke on March 7th for a return.
The next step for Wilson is imaging, which could come any day now per TarHeel 247:
As for Wilson, the timetable remains unclear. It has been over two weeks since he injured his left hand against Miami. The fracture in the hand was discovered on an X-ray two weeks ago Thursday. He is progressing, but his return largely depends on what further imaging reveals, which could take place any day.
"He would play tonight if I would let him," coach Hubert Davis said Wednesday night on his weekly radio show. "He just wants to be out on the court badly. He just really does. He's getting better every day. We have another doctor's visit later this week (and will) reevaluate the timetable. If everything stays like we think it will, hopefully he'll be back soon."
Henri Veessar says he's 100%
With Wilson out, UNC was also missing starting center Henri Veesaar with an illness and lower-body injury. He has since returned, coming back for the win over Syracuse last Saturday and has played in two games.
While Veesaar has returned, the questions are out there as to how he is able to handle the workload. But Veesaar has good news as he told The Field of 68 podcast that he's "100% healthy".
"I'm definitely 100 percent, I'm able to practice, I'm able to play in games, and playing without any pain," he said.
That's about as good of news as you could ask for in terms of your two best players down the stretch.
Follow us @TarHeelsWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of North Carolina Tar Heels news, notes and opinions.
With the NFL scouting combine set to kick off, the Michigan football contingent who have made their way to Indianapolis to show out for scouts, general managers, and coaches, will have their opportunities to impress and make their way up draft boards.
One notable player, edge rusher Derrick Moore, has been hampered by a hamstring injury and won't be at full strength and able to participate in running drills. But there's another name that is starting to gain some steam.
According to ESPN's Field Yates, there has been some notable buzz for outside linebacker Jaishawn Barham, who spent all of 2024 more so lined up in the middle before primarily becoming an edge rusher in 2025. The thought is that his ability and versatility should be showcased this week at Lucas Oil Stadium, and it could cause him to be chosen by an NFL franchise sooner rather than later.
Michigan edge rusher Jaishawn Barham is picking up steam in the scouting community, which I don't expect to slow down anytime soon. He began his college career at Maryland and was a stand-up linebacker for much of his college career, but at 6-foot-3 and 243 pounds, he played a hefty dose of edge snaps in 2025 and showed unique explosiveness. He's a Day 2 prospect now who will only create further intrigue with a big week.
That explosiveness is likely to be tantalizing for NFL types, as well as the ability to move him inside or outside. It's no surprise that he played a bit of a hybrid role in Ann Arbor, considering that his defensive coordinator, Wink Martindale, was a longtime NFL mainstay and was considered to be among the best at his craft just a few short years ago.
Barham finished his 2025 campaign with 32 tackles, 10 tackles for loss, four sacks, three passes broken up, five quarterback hurries, and one fumble forced. He appeared in 12 games, having not played in the bowl game, but also having missed the second half of Week 1 and the first half of Week 2 due to a controversial targeting call.
Michael Scotto: The Milwaukee Bucks and Cormac Ryan have agreed to a two-way deal, league sources told @hoopshype. Ryan, a G League standout for the Wisconsin Herd, has averaged 20.4 points on 48.2% shooting from the field and 42.1% from 3-point range, 4.6 rebounds, 2.9 assists, and 1.5 steals.
The impact of no longer having NBA live rights is all over the latest earnings report from Warner Bros. Discovery. But the TNT Sports parent company is still touting its current rights portfolio and financial savings to come. WBD said Thursday that it posted $9.46 billion in revenue for the fourth quarter of 2025, down 6% from the same period in 2024. Meanwhile, the net loss was $252 million, an improvement from the comparable $494 million loss. Within those topline figures, WBD said that the loss of NBA live rights created a 4% drag on advertising revenue in the fourth quarter, absent of currency effects. That effect is expected to grow to 7% in the first quarter 2026 and to 20% in the second quarter due to the comparison to last year’s NBA postseason.
Every year, you can bet Sarkisian is going to lock up an elite track guy at WR. This is that guy for the 2026 class. Kohen Brown comes in as a four-star, No. 45 WR in the country, with blazing 10.6 100-meter speed. This is someone that could very well be the heir apparent to Ryan Niblett as the primary returner/gadget guy for the Texas offense. Like Niblett, he also brings elite versatility to the table on both sides of the ball.
High School Stats: 110 catches, 2,127 yards, 27 TDs in two seasons
Brown is one of the many Texas-products in this class, coming from Waxahachie High School. During his time there, he put together elite junior and senior seasons, topping 1,000 receiving yards and 12 TDs in both. He fits the mold of many other Steve Sarkisian era WRs: speedsters that just need the ball in space to make big plays.
Brown is someone I’d be surprised to see much of in 2026, both because of the youth and how deep the WR room is. I suppose there’s a world where they want to give him a look at DB this spring, but I’d expect him to be a WR long term. I do believe he will be a very important player heading into 2027. He is unlikely to be a sure-starter at WR but I expect him to factor into the special teams significantly once Niblett moves on.
The Longhorns class is filled with players that if they were in Sarkisian’s 2021 class, they would’ve been immediate contributors. Now, they fit into the depth chart and will have to wait their turn. It’s a fantastic place to be and I believe Brown could be a true difference maker during his time in Austin. He’ll just get a chance to learn from the remarkable players in front of him.
Brown brings so many elite attributes to the table, led by his elite speed at 190lbs. This is someone that I wouldn’t be shocked was a fan-favorite in 2027 and beyond. For now, it’ll be about learning from the veterans in front of him, refining his skills and hopefully making some flash plays on special teams.
The same(minus the special teams) applies to four-star IOL Nicolas Robertson. Robertson enters a room with plenty of opportunity to be had, especially in a spring with many moving parts in the OL room. We’ll talk about why this could turn out to be a major hit for Texas.
When Southampton appointed Tonda Eckert, there was a clear belief inside the club about the direction they wanted to go.
Placing such responsibility in the hands of a 31-year-old coach was a bold decision, but it was one made with conviction - and 21 games on from replacing Will Still, that faith is being repaid.
Across those 21 matches Saints have reshaped their season.
Only one side has taken more points in that period and no team has scored more goals.
This is not a short-term bounce - it is sustained, measurable progress built on clarity, structure and belief.
A seven-game unbeaten run, five wins and two draws, has carried Saints from 15th and 10 points outside the play-offs to seventh, now just four points off sixth place.
That turnaround has not happened by chance. It has been driven by consistency, renewed togetherness and the building of a genuine spine through the team.
January's recruitment played its part too.
Daniel Peretz arrived from Bayern Munich to strengthen the goalkeeping department, while Cyle Larin added presence and experience at the top end of the pitch.
James Bree returned from his loan at right-back, and the partnership of Taylor Harwood-Bellis and Jack Stephens has brought stability in defence.
In midfield, Flynn Downes looks back to his best, dictating games and providing control.
What I have enjoyed most is the spirit, something I felt was missing earlier in the season.
Now there is intensity, unity and a willingness to work for one another that is clear for all to see.
The press is coordinated, the defensive shape more assured, and when Saints score you see a group that truly believes.
Reverting to a back four in January was another pivotal call, since then the balance feels right.
Now come away tests at Sheffield Wednesday, West Brom and Coventry. Navigate them well and Saints will be the team nobody wants to see in the play-offs.
Jack Doohan at the Austria Grand Prix on June 27, 2025 Credit: Rudy Carezzevoli/Getty
NEED TO KNOW
Jack Doohan, who was a Formula 1 driver for Alpine during the 2025 racing season, revealed that he received "serious death threats" last year
He said that people were threatening to cut off all his limbs if he continued driving for the team
The revelations were made public during season 8 of 'Formula 1: Drive to Survive' on Netflix
Formula 1 driver Jack Doohan faced what he calls some "pretty heavy stuff" while racing for Alpine during the 2025 season.
On season 8 of Formula 1: Drive to Survive, which debuts Friday, Feb. 27 on Netflix, the 23-year-old Australian detailed the external pressures he faced during his full-time debut on the racing circuit last year. Driving for Alpine, Doohan was partnered with fellow racer Pierre Gasly but struggled to make pole position during the first five Grands Prix of the season.
During episode two of the docuseries, Doohan was seen dealing the mounting criticism inside and outside the track. "There's been so much s--- in the press in the last two, three months," he said at one point, before Gasly, 30, said, "I feel for the guy because everybody is talking about him in a way that is quite toxic."
"It's not easy to deal with the pressure, tension, death threats," Gasly added, noting that Doohan was only 22 years old at the time.
Jack Doohan at the Miami Grand Prix on May 3, 2025 Credit: Alessio De Marco/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
"On top of all this, I got serious death threats for this Grand Prix. Saying they're gonna kill me if I'm not out of the car," Doohan later went on to say in the episode, adding that he got emails "saying if I’m still in the car by Miami [Grand Prix], that I’ll be — you know, all my limbs will be cut off."
The Miami Grand Prix in Florida was just the sixth race of the 2025 Formula 1 World Championship, with 18 more still to go at that point.
Doohan then recounted a harrowing incident where he was "with my f---ing girlfriend and my trainer, and I got three f---ing men, like, armed men. One at that window, one there and I had to call my police escort to come and get it under control."
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Before the end of the episode, Doohan noted that what he was going through at the time was "pretty heavy stuff. It's not the nicest way to be going racing."
Unfortunately, Doohan's performance at Miami, where he qualified 14th before retiring after a collision in the first lap of the main race, did not improve. He was subsequently demoted to a reserve driver while Alpine went through some shakeups in its roster.
After the season ended, Alpine announced on Jan. 13, 2026 via X that Doohan had been let go from the team, stating that "it has reached a mutual agreement with Jack Doohan to not continue his driving services with the team for the 2026 FIA Formula One World Championship season and allow him to pursue other career opportunities."
Jack Doohan on season 7 of 'Formula 1: Drive to Survive' Credit: Courtesy of Netflix
Nearly a month later, on Feb. 3, Haas announced that Doohan would be joining the American team as one of its reserve drivers.
"Welcoming Jack to the family," the team posted to X at the time. "We're excited to announce the signing of Australian Jack Doohan as our Official Reserve Driver for the 2026 season."
They added, "The team will now hold two drivers in the reserve role with Jack joining Ryō Hirakawa in duties."
"I’m thrilled to be joining TGR Haas F1 Team," Doohan said in a statement, per Formula1.com. "It’s the ideal place to continue my Formula 1 career."
The 2026 Formula 1 World Championship officially kicks off with the Australian Grand Prix on March 8.
Formula 1: Drive to Survive season 8 debuts Friday, Feb. 27 on Netflix.
There's high anticipation for what Kyle Whittingham's version of Michigan football will look like, and it's not just the fans who are waiting with bated breath. Even outgoing players are excited to see what next year's squad is able to do.
Meeting with NFL media in Indianapolis for the annual scouting combine, outgoing Wolverines defensive tackle Rayshaun Benny was asked if he had to bet his first NFL paycheck on one of Michigan's second-year players to succeed, who would it be on?
Naturally, the answer is the name on everyone's lips: Bryce Underwood. However, there is a close second.
"Bryce. I was about to say Marsh, Andrew Marsh," Benny said. "He was pretty much like a raw talent. I was about to say that. We knew the talent was there. I was about to say I think this year he would take a huge leap. The coaches that was brought in and a specific coach to actually help develop him."
Whittingham has overhauled the coaching staff by bringing in an offensive coordinator, Jason Beck, and a quarterbacks coach in Koy Detmer Jr., who appear to have a finger on the pulse of what Underwood needs to maximize his potential. What's interesting is that even outgoing players note that that level of tutelage was lacking for Underwood a year ago.
But it's also interesting to hear Benny mention Marsh, the enigmatic wide receiver who was one of the best, if not the best, pass catchers in the Big Ten in the latter half of the season.
So, where has he seen Marsh improve over the course of last year?
"Everywhere," Benny said. "I was about to say once he hit the field, he had to turn around. I was about to say he made a play here. He kept making plays throughout the season."
The combine starts now in anticipation of April's NFL draft, but spring ball for the maize and blue will begin on March 17 with eyes on the April 18 spring game at The Big House.
Manny Pacquiao at MGM Grand Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas in July 2025. (Ethan Miller / Getty Images)
The case can be made that those who conceived and arranged the 2015 boxing match between Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao deserve to be compensated.
After all, the "Fight of the Century" at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas — won by Mayweather — set records with 4.6 million pay-per-view buys and $72 million in ticket sales.
So it's no surprise that long after both boxers slipped comfortably into (temporary) retirement, legal fights endured over even slim slices of that cash-stuffed pie.
For 10 years — and counting — lawyers and judges have attempted to determine what claimants are due and whether Pacquiao in particular suffered reputational damage along the way.
Meanwhile, retirement is relegated to the rear view and a rematch Sept. 19 at the Las Vegas Sphere will be streamed live on Netflix. Mayweather is 49 and Pacquiao 47, yet another staggering payday serves as a great motivator.
And court battles continue. The latest salvo was a filing by Pacquiao this week in Los Angeles Superior Court accusing respected law firms and their restaurant server client of attempting to extort millions of dollars from the boxer by fabricating a verbal agreement and falsely accusing him of texting photos of dismembered bodies in a "terror campaign."
Gabriel Rueda was a waiter at Craig's restaurant in West Hollywood when he sued Pacquiao in 2016, claiming he was owed a finder's fee of $8.6 million for connecting the boxer’s trainer Freddie Roach with then-CBS president Leslie Moonves to arrange the 2015 fight with Mayweather.
Rueda demanded $42 million in damages. Enter former boxer Richie Palmer — a friend of Roach and husband of Rachel Welch — who told a judge that Rueda promised him half of his finder's fee if he could bring together Roach and Moonves.
A judge granted Pacquiao a summary judgment in 2024, dismissing Rueda's case and making Palmer's claim moot.
Now Pacquiao is delivering a counterpunch. This week he filed a malicious prosecution lawsuit, seeking compensatory and punitive damages against Rueda and deep-pocketed law firms Khan Law Office and Withers Bergman, as well as defunct firm Pierce Bainbridge Beck Price & Hecht.
Pacquiao asserts in the filing that he never communicated with Rueda about a Roach-Moonves meeting, let alone agreed to pay him anything.
His attorneys produced a letter from Rueda intended for Mayweather that was not discovered until 2023 through court-ordered forensic recovery of Rueda's iCloud account. According to the lawsuit, Rueda stated in the letter that he “asked for nothing in return," for introducing Roach to Moonves. "No finders fee, no compensation.” Rueda was given a ticket to the 2015 fight, a hotel room in Las Vegas and $10,000 to cover expenses, according to the filing.
Pacquiao alleges that the email was hidden by Rueda and his attorneys despite discovery requests and a 2018 court order compelling production.
Pacquiao’s complaint also established that the texts of body parts and threats to Rueda were actually duplicates of messages from a widely distributed drug cartel scam. Rueda claimed in 2020 that he received text messages of images of dismembered bodies from associates of Pacquiao.
But records produced by Pacquiao's lawyers showed that at least one of the messages was sent to more than 100 people in what the complaint describes as a “cartel scam.” Rueda dropped the claim in 2024 after Pacquiao's team discredited it.
Pacquiao's lawyers wrote that his lawsuit is "arising from one of the most egregious abuses of the civil justice system — the deliberate prosecution of knowingly false and sensational allegations for the purpose of inflicting reputational damage and coercing payment.
"Defendants knowingly and deliberately misused the judicial process to prosecute claims that were completely fabricated from the outset and directly refuted by evidence that Defendants knew about, possessed, and suppressed."
Pacquiao's lawyers said the boxer "incurred millions of dollars in legal fees and costs to clear his name."
While the lawsuit is litigated, Pacquiao likely will be training for his rematch with Mayweather, who is involved in legal action of his own.
Earlier this month, Mayweather sued Showtime and former executive Stephen Espinoza for $340 million, accusing them of depriving him of a “significant portion of his career earnings.” He alleges that Showtime "through a complex web of hidden accounts, unauthorized transactions, and deliberate concealment of financial records,” wrongly paid some of his earnings to his former manager, Al Haymon.
Pacquiao and Mayweather must be cutting some serious checks to their lawyers. But their rematch should earn them more than enough to cover legal expenses: Mayweather made at least $250 million and Pacquiao at least $125 million for their first fight, which generated more than $600 million in total revenue.
Teams go through shooting slumps in college basketball. Defensive ruts happen, too.
The UConn men have experienced both this season. And on Wednesday in the Big East’s biggest game of the year, the Huskies broke through with a statement, 72-40 decimation of 15th-ranked St. John’s inside a rocking PeoplesBank Arena in Hartford.
After a stretch of defensive regression that began in the first meeting of the league’s heavyweights, in which the Red Storm claimed an 81-72 victory on Feb. 7, the Huskies put the clamps on St. John’s on Wednesday. They allowed only 11 made shots from the field, just two in the second half and none in the last 17 minutes and 28 seconds. St. John’s 40 points were the lowest total for a Rick Pitino team in any of the 1,224 college games the Hall of Famer has coached.
UConn looked like a legitimate national title contender for the first time in months.
“It was just our night. They obviously – it just starts snowballing on you when you have a night like this. Obviously we played really good defense on them and I thought we demoralized them a little bit when the score gets where the score got,” UConn coach Dan Hurley said. “I just think it was one of those nights where everything went great for us and everything went wrong for them. But we did a lot to make that happen.”
Tarris Reed Jr. played the way he needs to for the Huskies to win it all, scoring an efficient 20 points with 11 rebounds and six blocks and holding Zuby Ejiofor – who had 21 points, 10 rebounds and seven assists in the first meeting – to just six points and four rebounds. Solo Ball and Braylon Mullins hit shots and showed significant improvement on the defensive end. Alex Karaban came through in big moments as he’s done his whole career, Silas Demary Jr. played an all-around game and limited his mistakes, and Jayden Ross and Malachi Smith made an impact at both ends off the bench.
“We played better, they played worse (from the first meeting). We screwed up less things, we switched more things and did a good job of keeping the ball from getting all the way to the front of the rim. We felt like, in the first game, we gifted them so many points in the game on pick-sixes, stealing our ball and going and laying it in, stealing a reverse pass, going and laying it in, not being able to rebound a free throw – we did all those things in the first game,” Hurley said.
“It was like bad charity, people that take money and then don’t use the money for people they’re supposed to give it to. We did that (expletive) the first time. We didn’t do it this time.”
Did Wednesday night change what the ceiling is for this UConn team?
“No,” Hurley said, citing the program’s 52-6 record in nonconference games, including the NCAA Tournament, over the last four years. “I just think the Big East is tough. It’s a grind, it’s physical, the people know us well, they know how we play offense. We’re a better nonconference team and an NCAA Tournament team than we are a Big East team.”
“I think our ceiling has always been winning big-time games and pushing for a Big East and even a national championship,” Demary said. “I think we just kind of went through a stretch of letting things slide, and when we kind of locked back in all the way and (started) doing the things we needed to do, our ceiling is what we showed tonight.”
Karaban finishes career 31-1 in Hartford
Wednesday was Karaban’s final game in Hartford, where UConn’s all-time winningest player has had the most success in his career, going 31-1 in the capital city.
That one loss came to a St. John’s team coached by Mike Anderson that went 7-13 in league play in 2022-23. The team heard boos as it came during the stretch of six losses in eight games that preceded back-to-back national championships.
It was a completely different environment on Wednesday, certainly the loudest home crowd of the season in a game where the Huskies gave their fans plenty to cheer about.
“This probably was like the best crowd I’ve been a part of. The crowd really showed out tonight, we greatly appreciate them and they really made a big advantage for us,” he said. “But yeah, that loss, we just got out-toughed, everything that (could’ve) went wrong, went wrong… It was bad, fans were leaving early, we got boos, yeah it was bad. It’s mixed in that January spurt freshman year, so I just include that in January and, not fun.”
Karaban will be recognized on Senior Night before the Seton Hall game on Saturday at Gampel Pavilion. He went through it last year, but there will be no option to come back this time.
“I definitely almost shed a tear coming off this court today, realizing all the great memories I had, all the great games I’ve played here. Just knowing I won’t play another game in here again, it hit hard for me,” he said. “Saturday, I try not to think about it. I can be emotional, so I think I probably will cry.”
Demary has textbook game as Huskies’ QB
Demary didn’t put too much pressure on himself knowing the ball security issues he’s had against St. John’s in the past, turning it over nine times in the Feb. 7 matchup after his career-high 10 turnovers against the Johnnies while at Georgia last year.
He only gave it away once on Wednesday, while the Huskies led by 30 with seven minutes left in the second half. He finished with seven points, eight rebounds and five assists.
“Silas has got a lot of weapons. This team is about balance, and Silas did the right things today. He took five shots, he got on the glass, he took care of the ball, he found his teammates. He quarterbacked the team today,” Hurley said.
Augusta National Golf Club is partnering with the U.S. Golf Association to pave the way for junior golfers in America.
The USGA announced Thursday that Augusta National and Masters Tournament Charities have committed $1.5 million over three years to support the expansion of the State Junior Team component of the U.S. National Development Program.
The commitment, which runs from 2026-28, will provide $500,000 annually to help grow and strengthen state-based junior development programs across the country, with the goal of having all 50 states participating in the State Junior Team Program by the end of 2028.
“Masters Tournament Charities shares our belief that meaningful development starts at the local level,” Heather Daly-Donofrio, managing director of the U.S. National Development Program, said in a release. “Their commitment to the State Junior Team Program is an investment in young athletes across the country, helping states provide thoughtful, high-quality development opportunities that support both competitive growth and personal development. We’re incredibly grateful for their partnership as we work toward a truly national pathway for junior golfers.”
Launched in January 2024, the State Junior Team Program is designed to create developmentally appropriate and aspirational pathways for junior golfers within their home states, helping them progress toward higher levels of competitive golf. Sixteen states currently have programs, and an additional 14 states joined the initiative in fall 2025. Those states will select their first rosters following the 2026 season.
Funding from Masters Tournament Charities will be distributed annually based on state junior team size. The investment will support athlete development and educational initiatives aligned with the USNDP’s guiding principle of Developing Athletes Who THRIVE, with an emphasis on both on-course performance and off-course growth.
In addition to athlete-focused programming, the funding will support enhanced resources for state team administrators, including shared educational materials, instructional videos and opportunities for states to collaborate and exchange best practices as the program continues to scale nationwide.
Each participating State Junior Team Program is overseen by a committee composed of representatives from major golf organizations within the state, including Allied Golf Associations and PGA of America Sections. These committees are responsible for establishing team selection criteria and administering state programs in accordance with guidelines provided by the USGA, ensuring a consistent national framework while allowing for local leadership and collaboration.
The State Junior Team Program is a key pillar of the U.S. National Development Program, which was launched to strengthen the pipeline of American golf talent by expanding access to development opportunities and creating clearer pathways for young athletes across the country.
Egor Dëmin can flat-out shoot the rock. That much is undeniable at this point.
Fifty games into his rookie season, the Nets guard is sitting No. 9 on NBA.com’s Kia Rookie Ladder, averaging 10.5 points, 3.2 rebounds and 3.2 assists. He’s also been one of the best rookie shooters in the league, drilling 38.5% of his 3s while launching 6.3 a night.
The jumper gives Brooklyn spacing, and it gives Dëmin a base to build on. But the next step is the one that changes how defenses treat him. It’s not another layer of shot-making. It’s learning how to consistently get into the paint and get to where he wants to go on the floor, on his terms, against NBA bodies and NBA game plans.
Entering Thursday’s game against the San Antonio Spurs at Barclays Center, Dëmin is attempting just 3.1 drives per game. For context, elite point guards such as Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Cade Cunningham are averaging 18.5 and 16.3, respectively. That’s the difference between being a shooter defenses can chase and a creator who forces help, shifts coverage and opens the court for everyone else.
And it’s easy to see why this is the swing skill, especially because shooting was supposed to be Dëmin’s biggest concern entering the league. Everything gets harder if he can’t touch the paint consistently. His reads get tighter. His passing windows shrink. His jumpers are more contested because defenses don’t have to respect the drive in the same way.
Even great shooting can start to feel like you’re working uphill if you can’t create a second threat. Nets head coach Jordi Fernández has seen the work, and he’s been clear that the summer is where this jump will really be made.
“We’re seeing positive steps,” Fernández said. “He’s working at it, and his summer of work will be the most important thing. He’s willing to get outside his comfort zone, and right now trying it in game reps is tough, but he’s putting in the extra work.”
That “outside his comfort zone” piece is key.
Driving at the NBA level isn’t just deciding to be aggressive. It’s having the handle and the strength to keep the dribble alive through contact, having the patience to change speeds, and having the confidence to make mistakes without retreating back to what already feels safe. It’s a skill that only becomes comfortable by being uncomfortable on purpose.
That’s why Jason Kidd’s voice carries incredible weight. Kidd is a New Jersey Nets legend and one of the best point guards ever. His perspective matters for a young player still learning the job. When the Dallas Mavericks visited Brooklyn on Tuesday, Kidd said that the separator for great players is one who knows how to get to where they want on the floor. They don’t negotiate with the defense. They manipulate it.
“Getting where you want is what you want,” Kidd said. “The great players all get where they want — step-back three, side-step three, to the rim, Euro step. Shooting you can work on, sometimes it just takes time. If you can stay the course and have patience, it will come. If you can’t get where you want to go, there’s no way you can get the shot off. I’d take that package, and that young man has it.”
Kidd also framed the rookie point guard experience the way it actually feels for players living it, fast, messy and unforgiving. There’s a lot to manage, and most of it you can’t truly learn until you’re in it, failing on the floor with real consequences.
“It’s hard for anyone as a rookie,” Kidd said. “It’s like a rookie quarterback with no offensive line trying to figure it all out on the fly. There’s a lot you’re responsible for, so you have to go through it, fail and be uncomfortable. The sooner you get uncomfortable, the sooner you grow.”
For NFL Draft fans, there is nothing quite like the NFL combine. The testing is not much in terms of action, but regardless, it gets you on the edge of your seat for the first time since the Super Bowl.
On Thursday, we get to see two position groups on the field with actual testing in the defensive line and linebackers. Both are positions that the Vikings could use some help at this draft cycle, so we wanted to give you some players to watch today when testing begins at 3:00 p.m. EST on NFL Network.
In this piece, we will focus specifically on linebackers. It is not a massive need, but the play the team got from the group was hot and cold throughout the year. This class is deeper than most, so it makes sense that they may target one player from the group at some point.
With that in mind, here are five players we are looking forward to seeing test at the NFL combine.
Jake Golday, Cincinnati
Jake Golday is a fun linebacker prospect in this year's class and someone the Vikings could target on Day 2. Golday is someone who could prove himself useful as the team looks to defend the run better in 2026 and beyond. He has good range and change of direction skills to not lose momentum. Testing will play a larger part in his evaluation than most, but he should do well.
CJ Allen, Georgia
CJ Allen could be in play for the Vikings at 18, regardless of how he tests. He showed this year at Georgia he is one of the best leaders in the middle of any defense in the country. He offers both run and pass support as he can blitz when assigned, or simply roam the middle of the field. If he tests well on Thursday, look for Allen to be firmly in the discussion for the Vikings at 18.
Anthony Hill Jr., Texas
Anthony Hill Jr. is very much a project for whoever lands him. That being said, he reminds me a lot of Lavonte David in that he can be a versatile piece in a defense. If Hill is wired right, which teams will figure out in interviews, and the testing matches what everyone expects, then he could sneak into round one. Most likely, though, he will be a steal for someone in the middle or end of the second round.
Sonny Styles, Ohio State
Arguably, the best linebacker in the Ohio State defense is now being discussed, but testing could project him into the top ten. However, if he doesn't make as big a splash as some hope, he could be prime for the picking in the middle of round one. Styles is everything you want in the modern linebacker, where he is a unique blend of speed and power with good instincts. That makes Styles arguably the best linebacker in the draft.
Jacob Rodriguez, Texas Tech
The biggest name in the class is Jacob Rodriguez, after a season that saw him earn many awards, dominate on film, and be the highest graded defender in the country by PFF. Rodriguez won't wow anyone with his testing, most likely, but his instincts and movement skills will always stick out and could make him the steal of the draft despite it.
INDIANAPOLIS — The Colts have given former starting quarterback Anthony Richardson permission to seek a trade, a league source confirmed to IndyStar on Thursday.
Richardson, the No. 4 pick in the 2023 NFL Draft, was the opening-day starter in Indianapolis in back-to-back seasons, but a combination of injuries and ineffectiveness led to the Colts seeking competition for the job.
Daniel Jones won the starting job after a training-camp battle last season, then turned in the best season of his career before suffering a torn Achilles tendon.
Richardson is still recovering from a freak accident with a resistance band last October that caused him to deal with visual issues in his right eye, although the Colts quarterback has been cleared to play football again, according to general manager Chris Ballard.
The NFL is the ultimate arms race -- you can never have enough good quarterbacks -- and Anthony Richardson has entered the off-season chat. ESPN NFL reporter Stephen Holder just broke the news that the Colts have given Richardson permission to seek an off-season trade. and The Eagles have a factory, and Tanner McKee could again be the most valuable asset heading into the 2026 free agency and NFL draft frenzy. During the 2024 regular season, McKee was thrust into the spotlight, and he delivered on the moment, making himself one of the hottest talked about commodities.
A 2023 sixth-round pick out of Stanford, McKee could be among the players under contract that the New York Jets could target at the quarterback position.
The Jets will explore multiple quarterback options to replace Justin Fields and bring stability, including trading for veterans like Kyler Murray or Tua Tagovailoa, signing free agents like Malik Willis.
If the price tag is too high for Murray, Tagovailoa, and Willis, McKee could be another option.
The talented quarterback saw full-game action just once last season. McKee started in Week 18 against the Washington Commanders with the opportunity to help Philadelphia move into the No. 2 seed with a Bears loss to the Packers. McKee was 21-40 passing, one touchdown, one interception, and a 68.9 rating, a far cry from his 2024 debut.
The Jets are stacked with draft picks after trading away defensive tackle Quinnen Williams and Sauce Gardner. Still, there are building blocks on this roster, particularly along the offensive line and with Garrett Wilson. A trade for McKee could help the offense hit the ground running while using top picks on defensive replacements.
Hypothetical move season is in full swing, and writers are already speculating about potential blockbuster trades. ESPN's Dan Graziano and Ben Solak considered the possibility of the Jacksonville Jaguars moving on from wide receiver Brian Thomas Jr. and listed the New England Patriots as the top fit for such a deal.
They also mentioned the Buffalo Bills, Pittsburgh Steelers and Las Vegas Raiders as possibilities.
Thomas' numbers were down after his incredible rookie campaign. A year after posting 87 receptions for 1,282 yards and 10 touchdowns, he only mustered 48 catches for 707 yards and two touchdowns in 2025.
"There has been no indication that trading Thomas is something the Jaguars are planning, but there are teams monitoring the situation in case the hypertalented LSU product has fallen far enough down the Jacksonville depth chart that the front office would consider a move."
Thomas was given a 20 percent chance of being traded.
That isn't particularly high, but if available, the Patriots should be one of many teams that would show interest. Thomas is only 23 years old and still on a rookie contract. That alone could be enough to convince the Jaguars to run it back with him next season.
With that said, the Patriots could use an outside threat at wide receiver to combine with the production they got in the slot last season from Stefon Diggs. A pairing of Diggs, Thomas and Kayshon Boutte could fast-track the unit's growth in 2026.
Liam Rosenior says more must be done to stamp racism out of football and wider society [Getty Images]
Chelsea head coach Liam Rosenior has condemned the racial abuse aimed at a string of Premier League players, warning it is "very easy" for social media users to target them without facing punishment.
Blues defender Wesley Fofana was sent a series of abusive messages on Instagram last weekend after being sent off during his side's 1-1 draw at home to Burnley, with Clarets midfielder Hannibal Mejbri also subjected to online vitriol.
Wolves striker Tolu Arokodare and Sunderland winger Romaine Mundle were targeted as well, in what anti-discrimination group Kick It Out described as an "appalling weekend".
Speaking before his side's visit to Premier League leaders Arsenal on Sunday, Rosenior said it had been a difficult experience for Fofana.
"It is very easy to write whatever you want with no consequence when you are on social media," said Rosenior.
"Wes is a tough guy. He is a good guy. It affects you in ways that shouldn't exist. It shouldn't exist, whether it is online, whether it is verbal, in person.
"It is just something that we have to try our very best to eradicate from life, let alone football. But Wes is absolutely fine.
"In a perfect world, players don't take notice of what is on social media. The reality is that they do because they are human beings.
The UK Football Policing Unit (UKFPU) is investigating the incidents and said it would "do everything possible to identify those responsible and bring them to justice".
Fofana shared several screenshots of private messages he received after the game and then posted a message which read: "2026, it's still the same thing, nothing changes. These people are never punished.
"You create big campaigns against racism, but nobody actually does anything."
What happened is unacceptable - Le Bris
On Thursday, Wolves manager Rob Edwards and Sunderland counterpart Regis le Bris also hit out at the abuse their players had suffered.
Nigerian Arokodare, 25, had been part of the Wolves side beaten 1-0 at Crystal Palace on Sunday.
"[It's been a] really difficult week for him [Arokodare]," said Edwards. "He was upset and angered by it, understandably so.
"We have supported him, and we have had a few individual chats with him. We have spoken about it as a group to make sure we get around him and support him as well."
Sunderland's English winger Mundle, 22, was also targeted following his substitute appearance in Sunday's 3-1 home defeat by Fulham.
"What happened to Romaine is unacceptable - we stand with him," said Le Bris.
"There is no room for racism or abuse in football or anywhere else. That's clear for us. We stand for respect, inclusion and diversity - these are the values of football and the values of the club."
Police Scotland has also said it was investigating after Rangers players Emmanuel Fernandez and Djeidi Gassama shared screenshots of racist abuse aimed at them on their social media accounts after Sunday's 2-2 draw at Livingston.
Kick It Out said reports of online abuse were at record levels, increasing by a third compared with the same point last season.
Mike Ankers, UKFPU deputy director, told BBC Radio 5 Live the police unit has had an increase of about 115% in the number of reports.
"I don't know really why, but I repeat - we don't want to accept that," added Le Bris.
"We have to have a clear position and I think it's the case here at Sunderland, we want to defend values and when someone, a group of people, wants to threaten those values it's important to react."
Edwards added: "There have been a number of these instances, and very high-profile over this last week, which is really sad.
"They say, 'I'm OK, I have had it before'. I think that is what is difficult. That is tough to hear."
Edwards said Arokodare had trained this week and, despite being affected by the abuse, was "all right to play" in his side's home game against Aston Villa on Friday, which kicks off at 20:00 GMT.
However, Le Bris said Mundle "might be sidelined for a few weeks or months" with an injury and would miss Sunderland's game at Bournemouth on Saturday.
Responding to the Fofana and Mejbri abuse, a spokesperson for Meta, which owns platforms including Instagram, told BBC Sport: "No-one should be subjected to racist abuse, and we remove this content when we find it.
"No one thing will stop racist behaviour overnight, but we'll continue working to protect our community from abuse and co-operate with police investigations."
Following a dominant win Wednesday night over Mississippi State, Alabama has now extended their current winning streak to seven consecutive games, as well as improved their record to 21-7 overall (11-4 SEC).
As a result, Alabama continues to rise up the SEC regular season standings similar to week's past, with the Crimson Tide currently tied for the second-best record in conference play with Arkansas. When it comes to SEC Tournament seeding though, Alabama owns the tiebreaker over the Razorbacks due to a head-to-head win, meaning that if play began in Nashville today, the Crimson Tide would be the No. 2 seed, receiving a double-bye.
Here is a look at the updated SEC basketball standings entering an important slate of Saturday games for a majority of teams across the conference.
The Jacksonville Jaguars are looking ahead to the NFL Combine this week and, later, the draft. But some current NFL players are looking back, and their recollections will have Jaguars fans cringing.
In 2013, LSU's Tyrann Matthieu was a cornerback with a lot of hype surrounding him heading into the draft; the cornerback was a Heisman Trophy finalist and set an LSU career record for forced fumbles (11). Though he had some personal issues off the field, he was still considered one of the top cornerback prospects, and he ended up getting picked by the Arizona Cardinals.
His rookie season went well, with Matthieu named to the PFWA All-Rookie Team; by 2019, he had landed with the Kansas City Chiefs, where he remained until 2022, and then with the New Orleans Saints. He announced his retirement at the end of the 2025 season, after a very respectable career: Matthieu is a Super Bowl champion, was named to the Pro Bowl three times, and was a three-time First-Team All-Pro.
Yet in a recent interview, it was the Jags Matthieu talked about. He had interviewed with Jacksonville during the 2013 combine, and suffice it to say... the team didn't exactly make a good impression. During an appearance on the "In The Bayou" podcast, Matthieu said the Jaguars were his "weirdest" interview, and it isn't hard to see why.
"It's like, 20 dudes in the room, right? It's just you by yourself. You ain't got no lawyer or nothing. It's just you, like millions of dollars on the line, but can I at least bring my mama with me?" he began, laughing. "So I'm sitting in there and I'm just like, you know, like, what's next? And dude's sitting in front of me and literally, like, didn't ask me anything, but was like, I want you to guess who's everybody is in the room. And I'm looking, I'm looking, I'm like, well you sitting right in front of me, you must be important. You the guy. I'm like, who are you? The owner?"
Tyrann Mathieu’s weirdest NFL Combine interview was with the Jacksonville Jaguars 😳
"I was thinking, well, shit — you're sitting right in front of me. You must be important. Who are you, the owner?" pic.twitter.com/guTCGvYAMH
— In The Bayou With Tyrann Mathieu (@InTheBayouPod) February 25, 2026
Fan reaction was, understandably, not the greatest; one responded, "Thankfully, those clowns are gone from Duval. What he said doesn’t surprise me at all."
The "clown" in question is, presumably, Dave Caldwell, who was the general manager at the time. And as another fan noted, "Dave Caldwell does that and then proceeds to draft two terrible DBs before Mathieu. Truly one of the worst GMs in NFL history."
Poor management is something Jacksonville had been fighting for quite some time, first with Caldwell and then, later, with Trent Baalke. This blast-from-the-past isn't pleasant to revisit — not because Mathieu would have been a make-or-break player, but because it's a reminder of just how bad the franchise has been.
Yet it's also a reminder of how far the Jags have come. It's still early, but James Gladstone and Liam Coen did an incredible job revitalizing the team in 2025, and hopefully, fans won't have to wince at any more embarrassing stories like this one for a long, long time.
The Miami Dolphins benched quarterback Tua Tagovailoa at the end of the 2025 season and replaced him with Quinn Ewers after the former first-round pick led the team to a 6-8 record and completed 67.7% of his passes for 2,660 yards, 20 touchdowns and a career-high 15 interceptions.
There are plenty of intriguing options hitting the market this year from a four-time NFL MVP to a first-round bust that Miami actually got picks for to allow another team to draft him.
Before the new league year starts, let's take a look at all of the quarterbacks that will be free agents in a couple of weeks and identify what type of free agent they'll be.
Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) chief executive Abi Tierney says she does not feel safe while carrying out her role after being subjected to social media "hate speech".
Tierney came back at a toxic time in Welsh rugby. The WRU announced in October it planned to reduce the number of professional men's sides in Wales from four to three.
The governing body has also announced Ospreys owners, Y11 Sport & Media, are the preferred bidder to take over Cardiff, who the WRU has owned since April 2025.
This has caused concern for Ospreys' fans and players that their region will be the professional side cut, with guarantees only given until the summer of 2027.
"On a personal level, I don't feel safe at the moment and that is a horrible feeling," said Tierney.
"My children and my parents find it hard, especially my dad who has been a lifelong passionate supporter of Welsh rugby.
"I am not trying to personalise this because I do this job because I believe in it and love it.
"It is not what I want to talk about. I do this job and I have to take that [social media abuse] as part of it."
Tierney has chosen to do her first interview in a long time with the WRU in-house podcast where it was claimed no questions were barred.
Neither Tierney, chair Richard Collier-Keywood or director of rugby Dave Reddin have spoken publicly to the media since December with the BBC repeatedly requesting interviews with the WRU trio.
Collier-Keywood and Tierney have spoken at committee hearings in Parliament and the Senedd in front of Welsh politicians.
The WRU chief executive boss gave a stark example of the abuse she is facing online.
"A couple of weekends ago somebody put out an AI [artificial intelligence] image [of Tierney] in Nazi clothing," said Tierney.
"That is hate speech. I don't thing that's ok and it is not what the Welsh rugby family is about and we should not be making people feel unsafe.
"The social media aspect is hard. Challenge and ask me questions, I am happy to do that, but this is too far."
Tierney was asked what message she would give to the "keyboard warriors" which she says is also harming Welsh rugby's future with the impact it has on players, the ability to sell tickets and attract sponsors.
"Forget about me and whether you agree with or like me," she said.
"Think about Welsh rugby and its future and our ability to invest in the game at all levels.
"Let's pull together and get through this. It is an absolute privilege to do this job but we are making things even harder by the negativity and hate that is out there."
Tierney says she can understand the emotion about the WRU's decision to cut a side.
"I understand if you were going to make this decision, it was always going to come with a huge amount of disappointment, hurt and anger," said Tierney.
"When we did the consultation when we were just talking about the number of clubs, that was ok.
"It was only when the decision was being taken on which club that it might be [that gets cut] becomes very difficult.
"We have not made that decision yet but that's when it becomes hard.
"Did we understand the ramifications? Absolutely yes. Do we believe this is the way to ensure Welsh rugby is sustainable in the longer term? Yes.
"We have difficult short-term pain but it will end up with Welsh rugby being more sustainable.
"If we don't do this now we will continue to have clubs that struggle to perform, not be able to get the investment and maybe facing a similar outcome to Cardiff and we are going to have players continuing to want to go to England.
"So you have to do something different."
'It will get better because of the changes'
Tierney, Collier-Keywood and Reddin have been at the heart of the plans for change, although they say all decisions have been given unanimous backing by the board.
The trio have been viewed as three English people who do not have the best interests of Welsh rugby at heart, which Tierney dismisses.
"Some of the criticism is that I come from England, but I live in Wales, I consider myself Welsh, I have been a Welsh rugby supporter since I was tiny," said Tierney.
"So I do think I understand Welsh culture. I am not here for the short-term and will take responsibility.
"I ask myself every day is this in the best interest of Welsh rugby as a whole.
"As the WRU chief executive, I have to look at the whole system, not make decisions on what is best for individual parts of that system."
Tierney stated the current system is not working.
"It is failing and it is going to continue to fail unless we do something different," she said.
"The consensus coming out of the consultation we staged was we needed to change and that is when the difficult decisions have to be made.
"You have to take them with integrity and the courage of your conviction."
Tierney says she believes the WRU plans will improve Welsh rugby in the near future.
"I would not be doing it if I wasn't confident but it's probably going to get harder before it gets easier," said Tierney.
"I don't do this job because it's easy but I believe we will be in a better and more sustainable place. I know it will be because of the changes we make.
"I am here as a custodian and want to leave a positive legacy and make sure we are continuing to celebrate Welsh rugby for another 150 years.
A freshman, Mohr scored a team-high 40 points Feb. 14 at the Southwest Conference championships. Mohr won the 200-yard freestyle in 2 minutes, 0.8 seconds, won the 500 freestyle in 5:29.82 and helped the Irish to a win in the 200 freestyle relay.
Mohr received 47.12% of the reader poll votes. Willamette swimmer Ella Hughes was second (32.32%).
Here are the other nominees.
Avery Bengtson, Cottage Grove swimming
Cottage Grove junior Avery Bengtson scored a team-high 40 points to lead the Lions to the team title Feb. 14 at the 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 2 championship.
Bengtson won the 100 butterfly in 1 minute, 1.09 seconds and won the 100 backstroke in 1:01.29. She also swam legs on two relay teams.
Allison Cummings, Thurston wrestling
Thurston senior Allison Cummings won the Class 6A/5A Special District 4 title at 170 pounds Feb. 14 at Springfield High School.
Cummings won all three of her bouts and beat North Eugene's Juno Trudell by a 7-1 decision in the final.
Kassidy Hadden, Thurston wrestling
Thurston senior Kassidy Hadden won the Class 6A/5A Special District 4 title at 130 pounds Feb. 14 at Springfield High School.
Hadden won all three of her matches and beat Mountain View's Victoria Byrne by a 9-5 decision in the 130 final.
Ella Hughes, Willamette swimming
Willamette junior Ella Hughes was the Wolverines' top scorer with 33 points Feb. 14 at the Southwest Conference championships.
Hughes took second in the 50 freestyle in 25.16 seconds and was third in the 100 butterfly (1:02.82).
Isa Matthews, South Eugene swimming
South Eugene sophomore Isa Matthews scored a team-high 40 points to lead the Axe to the team title Feb. 14 at the Southwest Conference championships.
Matthews won the 200 individual medley in 2:12.5, won the 100 butterfly in 1:00.88 and swam legs on a pair of first-place relay teams.
Fina Miret, Marist Catholic swimming
Marist Catholic sophomore Fina Miret matched a team-high 29 points Feb. 14 to help the Spartans win the 4A/3A/2A/1A Special District 4 title.
Miret won the 200 individual medley in 2:17.28, placed second in the 500 freestyle (5:22.84) and helped Marist Catholic to wins in the 200 medley relay and 400 freestyle relay.
Juno Trudell, North Eugene wrestling
North Eugene junior Juno Trudell took second in the 170-pound bracket Feb. 14 Feb. 14 at Springfield High School.
Turdell won her first three matches of the tournament — including two by fall — before falling in the final to Thurston's Allison Cummings by 7-1 decision.
Rob Atkinson has made 23 Championship starts for Bristol City this season [Shutterstock]
Bristol City defender Rob Atkinson is set to miss around 10 weeks after sustaining a "really bad" ankle injury during their 2-1 win against Blackburn Rovers on Tuesday.
The 27-year-old was substituted at half-time at Ewood Park following a heavy tackle.
It means head coach Gerhard Struber has been left with one fit specialist senior centre-back in Noah Eile, who has only played 181 Championship minutes since arriving from New York Red Bulls on deadline day earlier this month.
Full-backs George Tanner and Cam Pring have been used regularly in a back three but the Robins do now look very light in defence.
"It's really bad news," boss Gerhard Struber said in his press conference before Friday's game against Watford (20:00 GMT). "This a really big hit for us.
"When you lose a player like Rob Atkinson or Rob Dickie, it's not so easy to say that we have the next.
"We will miss him but at the same time, it's a big chance for other players."
In positive news for the squad, right-back Ross McCrorie is "ready to come back" after missing three games with a concussion sustained during training. The Scotland international has previously deputised at centre-back on occasions.
However, midfielder Joe Williams is also set to miss a long period with his latest hamstring issue, though Struber is unsure on a timeline at present.
The Austrian has opened up the possibility of entering the free agent market - but whether anyone will be brought in or not remains to be seen.
Struber added: "We are looking what is maybe available. It is not easy to find one but right now we are watching."
Youssef Chermiti has produced his best performances this season on major occasions - and they don't much bigger than Sunday's Old Firm derby.
The striker has prompted plenty of criticism and fan frustration as he toils to live up to a hefty price tag, mustering just seven goals in 30 appearances.
But six of those have come against title rivals Hearts and Celtic, providing tantalising glimpses of what he is capable of.
Chermiti scored in injury time at Tynecastle in December when Rangers lost 2-1 to Hearts then netted a brilliant hat-trick as Danny Rohl's side twice came from behind to beat the Gorgie side 4-2 at Ibrox earlier this month.
The 21-year-old Portuguese hadn't joined Rangers in time for the opening league meeting with Celtic - the 0-0 Ibrox draw in August - but emerged as the matchwinner at Celtic Park in early January.
Rangers were fortunate to only be one down at half-time as Celtic - who were then helmed by Wilfied Nancy - spurned countless chances. Yet Chermiti soon changed the game, netting two in nine minutes to put Rangers ahead before the hour on their way to a 3-1 win.
Not only has he stepped up with goals in these games, he has also been sharper in attack.
Against Hearts this season Chermiti has managed eight shots (the most he has taken against any opponent) compared to just one against the likes of Dundee and Kilmarnock.
He has scored four big chances against Hearts and is averaging a goal every 39.5 minutes against the league leaders. Against Celtic he scored both of his big chances.
Contrast that with last weekend's frustrating draw with rock-bottom Livingston, where Chermiti attempted four shots and put only one target in a frustrating 90 minutes.
Consistency has eluded him but if Chermiti can continue his run of goals in big games he could be the key to a Rangers derby win on Sunday.
Aston Villa boss Unai Emery has been speaking to the media before Saturday's Premier League game against Wolverhampton Wanderers at Molineux Stadium (kick-off 20:00 GMT).
Here are the key lines from his news conference:
Emery spoke about the recent scrutiny Aston Villa have been receiving: "The first message is that we must enjoy what we are doing. Each day is something we must enjoy, practising, preparing games and focusing on the matches. We are going to face and we are going to fight day by day, next week, next month."
He added: "We are so motivated, we are performing and we are showing quality and how we are showing our energy and wishes. I am so motivated for the next match tomorrow and after tomorrow."
The boss was asked about how he feels playing against Wolves: "Wolves are a very difficult opponent. For both teams it is a journey because we have both been in the Premier League for a long time and they are playing at home with their supporters, they will feel it is a necessary match to show their capacity against us."
Emery does not think his players need a message to guard against complacency: "They know how much of a difficult match we are going to play tomorrow. We are here together."
And finally, the boss was asked if he knows how many points he needs for the Champions League. "I know it will be very difficult to compete for the position in the Champions League because we have United and Liverpool behind us and our position could be for them. They are very good, they challenge and have the power to challenge us."
A day after New England Patriots executive vice president of player personnel Eliot Wolf addressed reporters at the 2026 NFL combine, it was Mike Vrabel's turn.
And the head coach spoke about a lot, including how little time he's had to prepare for this week.
"Really, I haven't looked at much of the draft guys, personally, outside of what we looked at briefly in Foxborough before we came," Vrabel said. "But try to look at the free agents, try to understand, while we're here, who these players are. A lot of these guys I meet and I’m really excited to look at their film just based on their energy, just how they presented themselves and the passion in which they spoke. I'm excited to go and watch them."
So, here's a round-up of Vrabel's comments from his press conference on Wednesday:
Promoting Zak Kuhr to defensive coordinator
Just before the combine began, the Patriots promoted inside linebackers coach Zak Kuhr to full-time defensive coordinator after he had served in that role this past season after Terrell Williams was diagnosed with prostate cancer.
"I think there's a lot of things in play there," Vrabel said. "I think we're just trying to figure out what's best defensively for us, what's best for the staff organizationally and being able to get everybody's strengths where they need to be. I know that Terrell [Williams] will be able to help me on a lot of things, help the football team, help the defense, continue to have a big role in that, and then just seeing where things progressed with Zak and the comfort level that we had there.
"So, that's where we ended up, and I think we have a great staff. There'll be some people that we'll add going through this process."
However, Vrabel has yet to determine an official title for Williams, who will remain with the team in a senior role.
"He will when I get back to Foxborough. I don't want to sit here and misspeak and figure out where that ends up," the head coach added. "I've got a plan for him, and I think that a vision is better than the title, necessarily. So, I don't want to say something and not have that be an accurate depiction of what ends up happening once we work through a lot of different things."
Stefon Diggs' future with the Patriots
When the Patriots signed Stefon Diggs last offseason, it was a situation that truly benefited both parties, with New England getting a talented receiver and Diggs proving he could bounce back from the injury. However, they now have a very interesting decision to make, as Diggs could save $26.5 million in cap space by cutting him.
However, Vrabel only had good things to say about the receiver when asked at the combine.
"I mean, not only his future, but what he was able to do for us and come in and provide leadership," Vrabel explained. "He worked extremely hard in the time that he was rehabbing from the knee. I think he was just a really good presence each and every week. So, as we look to evaluate the football team, we're doing that constantly, Eliot [Wolf], myself, Ryan [Cowden], Stretch [John Streicher] and Eliot's staff."
"There's a lot of things that we'll do between now and the time that the football season starts," he added. "So, that's going to be the same with, I would say, most every player on our roster."
However, there is one other factor at play as Diggs is facing assault and strangulation charges, in which he pleaded not guilty, with the pretrial hearing set for April 1.
“We’re going to let the legal process run its course, just like we’ve said before,” Vrabel said. “Those players, whether that’s Stefon or anybody else that has something, have done exactly what they’re supposed to do, been where they’re supposed to be, communicated with the court when they’re supposed to communicate with them. So, we’re going to let all that take care of itself, and then we’ll have to see what the judgments are in those particular cases.”
Thoughts on the draft class
When asked about the prospects, Vrabel immediately highlighted the tight end class.
"Whether they're premium players or what people would say are first-round picks, I just know that when you go and you evaluate other teams and you get ready to play for them, there's a bunch of fourth and fifth round tight ends that end up starting, playing and contributing," he said. "So, wherever that value is, I just think that there are some names there.
Vrabel also addressed the edge position, which is a big need for the Patriots.
"We've met with a bunch of edge players," the head coach stated. "There's depth there. So, we'll continue to work our way across the board and enjoy these meetings, and I'll have to go back and continue to watch."
And as for what he's looking for, Vrabel's answer was simple.
"I think that there's got to be a violence," he detailed. "There's got to be ability to move off the football and to create some sort of disruption. You have to be able to factor in on the quarterback. You have to be able to make plays on the football.
Relationship with A.J. Brown
There is a lot of speculation that the Patriots will be in the market for a true star weapon this offseason, and many think that Eagles wide receiver A.J. Brown is a good fit. Brown has looked unhappy at times this past season in Philadelphia, so a trade is possible.
So with that, New England would be a good landing spot as he spent the first three seasons of his career with Vrabel and the Tennessee Titans.
“I’ve watched him grow. I’ve watched him mature. I’m proud of him, proud of the father that he is. I’m proud of the husband,” Vrabel said. “That has nothing to do with where he plays or where he played. Those are the things that are important.”
“We reach out and text each other during the good things that happen to each other. Sometimes things don’t go so well for the people that you’re close with, and you text for those as well. It’s a two-way street of support and reminders of what got us to where we are here today.”
Plan for free agency
Vrabel kept this one simple: "there's always time to be aggressive, but not reckless."
"We want to have a plan, and we want to bring in really talented players that we have a vision for, that we also believe in the type of character that they have as we build this team and improve on what we did this year," he explained. "So right now, the plan is to evaluate everybody that we can, have communication and conversations, when those times come, with the agents as we approach the tampering window.
"Right now, it's about gaining information from our scouting department and having our coaches look at it and then figuring out a few players at each position that may help us."
“Jalen Johnson has developed quicker than a lot of people have given credit for or expected,” Wilkins said. “But they always say, take care of your business at hand. Don’t worry about too much down the road right now. Worry about what you’re doing now. You take this one game at a time, one month at a time, one year at a time.” “He’s still a young guy, so it’s a few different areas where he can get better, and he will get better,” Wilkins detailed. “He will get better defensively. He will get better as far as different ways he can score. As a young guy, you can always get better. You can always add new things to your game to make you an even more lethal player. Being 24 years old, he’s still learning right now.”
We are now in the midst of the college football offseason. With it, the time of year has arrived in which potential rule changes for next season are discussed.
“The rules committee could focus on the targeting rule this offseason, and in particular, the suspension that comes with the penalty,” Zachary Neel of College Sports Wire wrote. “As things currently stand, a player who is flagged for targeting is ejected from the game if the foul occurs in the first half. However, if the penalty comes in the second half, they are both ejected from the game and suspended for the first half of the following game.
“The rule change would take away the carry-over aspect of the penalty and just result in a rejection for the current game, no matter when the foul occurs.
“The rules committee is also expected to address a recent string of dress code violations that have become popular among players regarding the length of their pants. There is a new trend with players wearing "short shorts" that go not far past the thigh pad, leaving their entire knees exposed.
“There is already a rule against this, but the conversations this week will be about enforcing that rule.”
While the proposed changes would seemingly not affect USC more than any other school, they would both be wins for college football. The targeting rule leading to suspensions has always been silly, especially given the controversial nature of how targeting is called. And if the dress code rule leads to fewer moments like Oklahoma’s kicker going viral for his short shorts against Tennessee, then everybody wins.
Rehan Ahmed became the youngest man to play Test cricket for England when he featured against Pakistan aged 18 in 2022 [Getty Images]
England will consider bringing in leg-spinner Rehan Ahmed for the T20 World Cup Super 8s match against New Zealand in Colombo.
England, who are already through to the semi-finals, will wait for another look at the pitch on Friday before naming their XI.
The match will be played on the same surface as New Zealand beat Sri Lanka on Wednesday, when 10 of the 15 wickets fell to spin, and England are keen to cover all options.
Bowling coach Tim Southee said he expects a "pretty scrappy" wicket.
"We've seen spin play such a big part here," Southee said.
"It's such a big ground. That doesn't mean seamers can't still have an impact - like [New Zealand seamer] Matt Henry last night."
Ahmed, 21, has been a regular around England squads but has not played a T20 since the tour of Ireland last September, nor has he featured at a World Cup.
He played in the three one-day internationals against Sri Lanka last month, also held on this ground, and twice filled in as an opener.
The leg-spinner would likely replace a pace bowler if he is selected - possibly Jamie Overton.
New Zealand picked only two pace bowlers in their win over Sri Lanka, in which 30 of the 40 overs were bowled by spinners.
England would still have Jofra Archer and Sam Curran as pace bowlers, plus Adil Rashid, Liam Dawson and Will Jacks.
Jacob Bethell is yet to bowl in the tournament because of a cut on his finger. His availability to bowl would also impact England's thinking.
Southee backed out-of-form opener Jos Buttler, who is on a run of four single-figure scores in succession.
"Jos has played enough cricket to know he would have been through various tough times throughout his career and I'm sure he'll bounce back at any stage," Southee said.
The Black Caps could be pipped to a semi-final place by Pakistan if they lose but England confirmed their progression with victory over Pakistan on Tuesday.
The run to the last four comes after the dismal Ashes defeat, which brought the future of coach Brendon McCullum into question.
Southee said McCullum, who he played alongside 170 times for New Zealand, has not changed amid the scrutiny.
"One thing with Brendon is he is the most consistent guy I have ever come across," Southee told BBC Sport.
"Nothing really changes from him. He believes in what he believes in. And we've seen in this tournament, we've won in different ways.
"Baz is just Baz. He just wants guys to do well, wants the team to do well and that hasn't changed when he was a player and as a coach as well."
Southee also spoke of his disappointment at not to be able to remain as bowling coach during the Ashes.
He was with the squad in the build-up and the first Test in Perth but then left to fulfil a playing contract in the ILT20.
"I had a two-year existing deal with the IlT20 which I had to fill, obviously the dates got moved from January to December which clashed with the Ashes," Southee said.
"It was disappointing. I'd have loved to have been there for all five [Tests]."
Johnson is the latest player from the Jets' once-heralded 2024 defense to be dealt since last season's trade deadline. New York previously traded two-time first-team All-Pro cornerback Sauce Gardner and former first-team All-Pro defensive tackle Quinnen Williams in 2025.
In 2025, Johnson recorded 3.0 sacks, six quarterback hits, and five tackles for loss for the Jets. The 27-year-old was set to have a $13.4 million club option exercised for the 2026 season—the final year of his four-year, $13.08 million rookie contract signed with the Jets in 2022.
The Jets found a trade partner in the Titans, who are looking to build a faster defense in 2026.
ESPN's Adam Schefter reports that the Titans sent defensive tackle T'Vondre Sweat to the New York Jets in exchange for Johnson on Thursday, although the trade cannot be officially processed until the start of the new league year in March.
Trade: the New York Jets are sending DE Jermaine Johnson to the Tennessee Titans in exchange for DT T'Vondre Sweat, per ESPN sources.
The trade cannot be processed until the start of the new league year in March. pic.twitter.com/PzdYW9JeZ1
The Titans part ways with Sweat after two seasons with the team. The Texas native registered 2.0 sacks, four tackles for loss, and three quarterback hits for Tennessee last season—matching his totals in tackles for loss and quarterback hits from his 2024 rookie year.
Cristiano Ronaldo is Real Madrid's all-time leading goalscorer with 450 goals in 438 matches [Getty Images]
Cristiano Ronaldo has become co-owner of Spanish second division side Almeria by acquiring a 25% share in the club.
The 41-year-old Al-Nassr forward has bought his stake in Almeria, who are owned by a Saudi Arabian investment consortium led by Mohammed Al-Khereiji, through his recently formed CR7 Sports Investments company.
While the financial details have not been disclosed, Ronaldo said in a statement he was looking forward to working with the leadership team "to support the next phase of the club's growth".
The Portugal international added: "It has been a long-held ambition of mine to contribute to football, beyond the pitch.
"UD Almeria is a Spanish club with strong foundations and clear potential for growth."
President Al-Khereiji said: "[Ronaldo] is regarded as the greatest to ever play the game, he knows the Spanish leagues very well and he understands the potential of what we are building here both in terms of the team and the academy."
Last year, Al-Khereiji's SMC Group acquired Almeria from Turki Al-Sheikh, who is chairman of the General Entertainment Authority (GEA), a Saudi government department.
Ronaldo spent nine successful years in Spain playing for Real Madrid, winning La Liga twice and lifting the Champions League four times before joining Italian side Juventus in 2018.
He has played for Al-Nassr in the Saudi Pro League since 2022 and is the best-paid player in football history with an annual salary of £177m.
Almeria were founded in 1989 are third in Segunda, two points off leaders Real Racing with 15 games to go.
'The portfolio keeps expanding' - analysis
A little over a decade ago, Cristiano Ronaldo did not want to contemplate life after football.
Those close to him warned he was living on a treadmill, and that when he retired, he might collapse unless he had built something to sustain him. He listened, and business became a way to continue to be relevant but also to give his family, who had put their own ambitions on hold, projects aligned with their passions.
The first step was symbolic. In 2016, Ronaldo partnered with a hotel group to open a property in Madeira.
Gradually, he began not only investing his wages but enjoying the process, the meetings, the strategy.
He still harboured dreams of making a Hollywood film, but discovered a similar satisfaction in building companies - applying the same discipline he had devoted to his body.
On the pitch, that obsession turned him into the most prolific goalscorer in history after the age of 30. Off it, it was shaping a second career.
According to the 2025 Forbes ranking, Ronaldo generated almost £210m on and off the field. Of that, just over £50m came from his non-football business interests - a very diverse portfolio.
He has increasingly channelled his activity through his investment and lifestyle companies, with holdings in a water brand, healthy-living app and a recovery products company, as well as underwear, fragrances and footwear.
As well as ownership stakes, he has high-profile partnerships with leading brands, has opened gyms across Portugal and Spain, and launched a range of watches.
And the portfolio keeps expanding.
Ronaldo co-founded a hair-transplant clinic group now operating in Spain, Portugal, Oman and Italy. One of its clients was his mother Dolores Aveiro.
What began with that first hotel in Funchal evolved into a joint venture launched in December 2015 and initially valued at more than £65m. There are now properties in Lisbon, Madrid, New York and Marrakech.
In December 2024, at the Dubai Globe Soccer Awards, Ronaldo said if he ever owned a club, he knew how to fix structural flaws he saw in some of Europe's giants.
And now he has taken a 25% stake in Almeria, who are owned by Al Khereiji - key to his move to Al-Nassr following his exit from Manchester United.
The treadmill was always going to stop one day, but he now has something to replace it.
"He came off with a bit of a knee injury so is a major doubt at the moment," Blackburn head coach Michael O'Neill told BBC Radio Lancashire.
"He's still being assessed but he couldn't get through the game and we'll see how he goes over the next 48 hours."
Tronstad has only missed five of Rovers' 34 league games this season and is in his third campaign with the club.
"He's an experienced player and in the short space of time I've been here I've been impressed by his character and level of play so we 'll have to see how he goes over the next period of time, but he's a loss to the squad," added O'Neill.
The Pittsburgh Steelers have taken an interest in a close family friend of Cameron Heyward at the NFL Scouting Combine, Kayden McDonald, who is also one of the top defensive tackle prospects of the 2026 NFL Draft.
At the scouting combine, McDonald revealed to reporters just how special his family's relationship is with the Heywards, as well as indicating he was interviewed by Pittsburgh.
“We have a great relationship — the Heyward family, my family and the Steelers,” McDonald said via Chris Adamski of the Tribune-Review. “It’s a great opportunity. I had a formal interview with the Steelers, and I felt really good about it.”
Per Adamski, McDonald's older brother Jayden played football with Connor Heyward growing up, which brought the two families together.
A pairing with Cameron and Connor Heyward could be on the horizon for McDonald, as the Steelers are still expected to address their defensive line in both free agency and the 2026 NFL Draft.
For up-to-date Steelers coverage, including any offseason moves, follow us on X @TheSteelersWire and give our Facebook page a like.
Looking back at the 2025 season, there were some bright spots amid the overall disappointment for the Tennessee Titans, who finished 3-14.
One of the season's brightest spots that has been somewhat overlooked is the rapid growth of linebacker Cedric Gray, who won the starting job during training camp and has never looked back. The second-year linebacker burst onto the scene as a tackling machine and was by far the Titans' most consistent linebacker throughout the season.
It wasn’t just the fans who watched his ascension, but also Mason Cameron and the team at Pro Football Focus (PFF) took notice, as Gray finished as one of their highest graded linebackers in 2025.
In just his second NFL season, and first as a starter, Gray took a monumental leap. The 23-year-old linebacker was a force in the run game, earning the second-highest PFF run-defense grade (92.7) at the position this past season — a mark that stands in the top five in the PFF era. He also recorded the second-most defensive stops (64) in the NFL.
Gray proved to be a foundational piece for the defense, leading the team in tackles and finishing second in the league in defensive stops in his first season as a starter. Now with Robert Saleh in the building, Gray should be in a position to thrive in the new defense.
West Ham boss Nuno Santo has been speaking to the media before Saturday's Premier League game against Liverpool at Anfield (kick-off 15:00 GMT).
Here are the key lines from his news conference:
Nuno starts with an update on Pablo Felipe, who is out with a calf problem: "He didn't join us yet as he's starting his own programme, so he's improving day by day. It all depends on him, so hopefully soon because we miss him."
On West Ham's recent form: "Unfortunately, some results are not coming, which we need. But in terms of performance, they are improving in different aspects and getting a clean sheet always motivates us." He added: "We cannot spend too much time and sorrow thinking what could be, we have to react and bounce back."
He says fighting for survival is tough but his side are motivated: "It's a big challenge and it can bring the best out of us. That's the main motivation. We have to keep chasing, and it's going to be a fight. Being a chaser is the reality. It's been that way for a while, but we're in the fight."
When asked about clean sheets, he said: "When we speak about our defensive organisation it comes from all the team, not only the back line. It comes from our striker, the way we organise, the way we intend to press. I think we are growing in that aspect of the game, which improves our defensive organisation. But I think players have been knowing each other better, realising that it is a team effort to achieve a clean sheet in the Premier League."
On West Ham conceding late goals recently while Liverpool have a tendancy to score late goals: "Minute one is important, and then you have to play the game action after action. What I ask is for total focus during the game... We are trying to correct conceding late goals, because it has impacted us. We're improving, but we will go into the match thinking of minute one not the end of the game."
When asked what's changed since they last played Liverpool he said: "We know that we played at home against Liverpool now it's at Anfield. We know how tough it'll be. So new things, I always think that the game is new things happening require new questions, new answers, new challenge, but we are ready to play the game... The boys work hard and well, we still have tomorrow, but the atmosphere is good, so we are confident realising how tough it is going to be, but we want to challenge it."
The Houston Texans need to upgrade their running back room after missing Joe Mixon in 2025. Who is one name to watch for when free agency begins next month?
How about a former Super Bowl MVP looking for his next big pay day?
"I expect the Texans to explore this running back market," Wilson said in his livestream. "I'm told that they will. Just like the year that they made a very legitimate run at Saquon Barkley and came up a couple million shy...
"The Texans, I expect, will look into Kenneth Walker III. I'm hearing the Texans will have interest in him."
The Texans are expected to show interest in Seahawks Free Agent RB Kenneth Walker via @AaronWilson_NFL.
Walker has ranked inside the top 12 in missed tackle rate forced each season since entering the league in 2022 (NFL Pro) pic.twitter.com/yyee6fx0Jk
Walker, a former Doak Walker Award winner with Michigan State, is coming off a career season with Seattle en route to its first Super Bowl title in over a decade. As the lead runner, Walker over 1,700 all-purpose yards and nine touchdowns combined between the regular season and playoffs. He also rushed for over 1,000 yards for the second time in his career.
Walker became the face of free agent conversations after his Super Bowl performance against the New England Patriots. As the top offensive weapon, he totaled 27 carries for 135 yards and caught two passes for 26 yards, cementing his status as the first running back Super Bowl MVP since Terrell in Super Bowl XXXII.
The Texans' options at running back could be thin as free agency looms. All reports indicate that Houston plans on releasing former Pro Bowler Joe Mixon to save $8 million against the cap space, while Dare Obunbowale and Nick Chubb are free agents. The latter, a former All-Pro with the Cleveland Browns, is expected to test free agency.
Options are scarce on the open market. The Dallas Cowboys and Javonte Williams came to terms on a new three-year deal to take his services off the market last week, while the New York Jets now seem likely to extend the franchise tag to Breece Hall without a new contract to keep him on for next season. Carolina Panthes running back Rico Dowdle might be the second-best name, but his asking price could expand now with two players inked to new deals.
Houston might not land Walker, but it's clear its ready to make a move to fix a run game that might have played a bigger role in the AFC South franchise missing the AFC title game.
The road to Columbus begins this weekend for wrestlers.
The sectional tournament kicks off what competitors hope ends at the Schottenstein Center in Columbus March 13-15.
Ashtabula County and Madison boys wrestling participants are scheduled to compete in Divisions II and III in the sectional tournament Saturday.
In D-II, Jefferson is at Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary; Edgewood, Conneaut and Madison, Kenston and Lakeside and Geneva, Northwest.
Pymatuning Valley is at Beachwood, while Grand Valley and Saint John are at Berkshire in D-III.
Action begins at 9:30 a.m. with the top four in each weight class advancing to the district tournament.
D-II district qualifiers will go to Kenston, while D-III participants will head to Independence March 6 and 7.
In the girls wrestling sectional Sunday, Madison, Edgewood, Conneaut, GV, PV, Lakeside and Jefferson are all at Austintown Fitch. Wrestling is slated to begin at 10 a.m.
The top four in each weight class will advance to the district tournament March 8 at Mentor.
Geneva’s Tanner Williams is among the boys’ wrestling hopefuls to advance.
Competing at 126 pounds, the junior recently recorded his 100th career win.
“I think it’s a great milestone, and I think it shows the dedication I put into wrestling, especially getting it as a junior,” he said. “I’m very. happy I was able to do it.”
Williams, 32-5, becomes the second Eagle to reach the 100-career win plateau this season. Dominic Palmisano notched the milestone last month.
“It always feels good as a coach to have one of your wrestlers reach such an accomplishment,” Geneva coach Ron Cerjan said of Williams’ feat.
A state alternate from last season, Williams has his mind set on going back to Columbus with the chance to compete.
Williams, who is ranked 23rd in a recent D-II borofan.net rankings at 126, has placed in the top six of multiple tournaments so far this season.
He went 5-0 at the PV Duals, and won the Riverside Rumble, Howland and Ashtabula County tournaments.
“I think this season has gone very well,” Williams said. “I’ve had a lot of ups and downs from losing matches I should’ve won and getting a few upset wins.”
He also finished second at the Eastlake North John Matteucci Memorial and Chagrin Valley Conference tournaments and sixth at Kenston.
“He lost 12-3 [major decision] to D-III-ranked Rocco Wrobel, from Crestwood, at Kenston and turned around and pinned him in the first period at the CVC tournament,” Cerjan said.
Williams said his work on top and defense on his feet have been solid all season, but there’s always things to improve on.
“I need to work on the small things and overall just keep improving in any position,” he said. “I think the key for me making state is having a good mindset going into all of my matches and keep drilling hard at practice.”
Prior to this season, Williams qualified for district as a freshman, going 0-2, at 106, before last season’s fifth-place finish at Kenston at 113.
“Since Tanner has been a freshman, he comes in every day and works hard to get better,” Cerjan said. “He sets a good example to young wrestlers on what has to be done to reach your goals. The next step is to get down to Columbus.”
MADISON — Tallmadge coach Tony Whitmer knew exactly what his team needed to do to slow down the high- powered Madison offense Wednesday night.
“We were not going to let No. 5 [Gianna LaMarco] beat us,” he said after his No. 12 seeded Blue Devils defeated No. 9 seed Madison, 53-44, in a Division III district semi-final game at Madison High School.
Tallmadge pressured the sophomore point guard and leading scorer all over the floor, slowing down LaMarco, who came in averaging over 20 points a game.
Madison, the ninth seed, entered the game averaging more than 65 points per contest.
“We had to get her tired,” Whitmer said of LaMarco. “Once we started chasing her and making the other girls handle the ball more and get out of their roles and everything ... that was a big part of our game plan.”
LaMarco finished with 12 points, but had to work hard for shots like her teammates against the Tallmadge defensive pressure.
Madison jumped out to a 11-7 lead in the game, highlighted by a pair of baskets each by junior Leah Brock and sophomore Maddie White, along with one by LaMarco.
Tallmadge closed the quarter with a pair of baskets by junior guard Rae Pooler to knot the score at 11.
LaMarco opened the second quarter with a 3-pointer, which prompted a time out by Whitmer.
Tallmadge responded, going on a 13-0 run over the next three minutes. Sophomore Naomi Richardson scored all of her nine points on the night in that span, propelling the Blue Devils to a 24-21 lead at half.
Tallmadge pushed its lead even more in the third quarter, outscoring Madison 18-9.
The Blue Devils grabbed seven offensive rebounds and held the Blue Streaks to without a field goal the final 5:30 of the quarter.
“We just couldn’t get into our rhythm,” Madison coach Heather Reho said.
Madison isn’t the only team which has had a tough time recently finding a rhythm against Tallmadge.
With the win, the Blue Devils raised their record to 18-6 overall and are peaking at the right time, according to Whitmer.
“We’ve been on a roll,” he said. “We’ve won 12 of our last 13 now and we play in a very competitive league.”
Pooler led Tallmadge with a game-high 18 points while junior post Jonna Albertson added 15 as the Blue Devils improved to 18-6 on the season.
Madison freshman CC Alley, who ran into some early foul trouble in the game, complemented LaMarco with nine points, while White tallied eight for the young Blue Streaks.
“Going 19-3 with such a young group is great,” Reho said. “These girls come in every day, they work hard and they support each other.”
Tallmadge is scheduled to play No. 13 seed Warrensville Heights for the district championship at 7 pm Saturday at Perry High School.
The top flight of English rugby union was rebranded as the Gallagher Prem from the start of this season [Getty Images]
A radical new structure for English rugby is expected to be rubber-stamped at a Rugby Football Union council meeting on Friday.
The Prem would separate from the rest of the pyramid, with traditional promotion and relegation immediately scrapped.
Instead the Prem will look to expand from 10 teams to 12 teams by 2030, with further expansion possible if ambitious clubs meet criteria on and off the field.
This could mean clubs like Wasps, Worcester and London Irish - who all went bust in the 2022-23 season - return to the top flight in the future.
As it stands, there is a mechanism for promotion and relegation to and from the Prem via a play-off with the top-placed side in the Champ.
However Ealing Trailfinders, consistently the best team in the second tier, have failed to meet the existing standards - especially around stadium size.
There has been no relegation from the Prem since Saracens went down in 2020 after a heavy points deduction for salary cap breaches. Sarries were also the last team to gain promotion after winning the Championship in 2021.
Under the new plans, ambitious clubs would still be able to apply for a place in the Prem, but would need to meet a variety of revamped criteria - financial and commercial, as well as on-pitch performance and potential.
English rugby insiders expect the new structure to collectively raise standards across the clubs and make the game more attractive to investors.
"We are lifting the bar on what we want clubs to do across various areas," said one leading executive.
According to sources, any club would be able to apply for a place in an expanded Prem.
They could be ambitious Champ sides such as Coventry, dormant former powerhouses like Wasps - who plan to relaunch in Kent in the coming seasons - or brand-new entities.
The Champ clubs had previously rejected plans for a franchise-type model, but leading figures in the club game insist their board has been consulted throughout the process and have endorsed the recommendation.
"It could be transformational for aspirational Champ clubs," a senior source told the BBC.
"We are looking at a range of different options to make the Premiership thriving, exciting and a really interesting place to invest in," RFU chief executive Bill Sweeney told BBC Sport last year.
"Part of that will be a model whereby you qualify for an expansion league in the Premiership, but based on criteria around financial sustainability, fanbase and stadium, not just performance on the field of play."
The Iowa women's basketball team accomplished quite the feat on Sunday when they took down fifth-ranked Michigan in front of a sold-out Carver-Hawkeye Arena.
The Hawkeyes' 62-44 win over the Wolverines was the team's seventh victory this season over an AP Top 25 opponent, which ties the program record for most such wins in a regular season. The last time Iowa did this was in the 2012-13 season, according to Bailey W. Turner of Iowa's Strategic Communications department.
This group of Hawkeyes will tie for the most regular season wins against AP Top 25 teams in school history.
vs. #7 Baylor #20 Nebraska #15 Michigan St. @ #15 Maryland #12 Ohio St. #25 Washington #6 Michigan
This is a particularly impressive feat for this team because they accomplished something that no team during the Caitlin Clark era was able to do. That's not to disparage that era of Iowa women's basketball, which was the most successful stretch of hoops in the history of the program and provided so many lifelong memories. It's more so a credit to this year's team and what they've done to keep the program at an elite level.
Six of those seven wins against AP Top 25 teams have come in Big Ten play, with the other win coming against a top-ten Baylor team in November. The Big Ten is an incredibly strong conference, so having that much success against those teams goes to show how good this team is in year two under Jan Jensen. She's consistently pressed the right buttons all season long and has done a great job leading this program after Lisa Bluder's retirement.
The Hawkeyes have two games left in the regular season before postseason play begins. If their record against ranked teams so far is any indication, they're going to be a tough out for whoever they match up with in March.
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 Zach on X: @zach_hiney
Wolves boss Rob Edwards has been speaking to the media before Friday's Premier League game against Aston Villa at Molineux (kick-off 20:00 GMT).
Here are the key lines from his news conference:
Edwards confirmed there were no new injury concerns and that both Angel Gomes and Joao Gomes are fit and "in a good place at the moment".
Edwards said there was "a lot to like about the performance" against Crystal Palace, a game they lost 1-0, adding: "I was equally frustrated after the game as we should have taken something from it. It was frustrating being a yard away from stopping the goal happening and making something of it. There was emotion and anger after the game."
The Wolves boss confirmed he had seen a positive reaction in training after the Palace loss. Edwards said: "We flipped it the next day and that shows that people care. The dressing room was interesting after the game. There is not a frustration that lingers which is causing any sort of problem. We have an exciting week, and we're at home to try to get some results as well."
On facing Aston Villa, who are currently placed third in the Premier League, Edwards said: "Villa are obviously a brilliant team and an amazing manager [Unai Emery]. They have a clear way of playing – we sort of know big, big elements of what we need to do to make sure we are competitive in the game. It needs to look like it matters to us. Villa are a team which can win a game in many different ways."
On the supporters galvanising the team: "The supporters have been amazing considering how difficult it has been. I know the players have got to produce, but what I want as well is for the supporters to keep backing the team. We need to bring our best, and I know the supporters will be right behind the lads."
Jeff Galloway, a pioneering runner who helped millions of people overcome fears and attempt their first marathon by promoting a run-walk-run strategy, and a member of the 1972 United States Olympic team, has died at the age of 80.
His death on Wednesday, Feb. 25, in a Pensacola, Florida, hospital was caused by a hemorrhagic stroke, according to his daughter-in-law, Carissa Galloway.
"Jeff spent his life proving that anyone could cross a finish line. He celebrated every mile, every walk break, and every finish. He coached millions, but found fulfillment in each of your stories of personal accomplishment," his family said in a statement. "Jeff did not just make runners. He empowered people to believe in themselves. He is survived by every person who ever crossed a finish line and thought, 'I didn’t think I could do this.' "
The effective run-walk-run marathon strategy, better known as "jeffing," began in 1974, two years after he made the Olympic team in the 10,000 meters and served as an alternate on the marathon team.
"My mission now, at the age of 80-plus, is to show that people can do things that are normally not done, and can do them safely," Galloway told The New York Times last year.
Galloway ran more than 200 marathons in his lifetime, and was recently hospitalized and had survived heart failure in 2021.
The Miami Dolphins have already moved on from Tyreek Hill this offseason, releasing the wideout after catching 340 passes for 4,733 yards and 27 touchdowns over the last four years with the team.
On top of that, the Dolphins may also lose Cedrick Wilson Jr. and Dee Eskridge in the near future, as they're both set to become free agents when the new league year starts next month.
Heading into 2026, Miami should be looking for more impact wide receivers for their quarterback to throw to, and earlier this week, Sports Illustrated's Justin Melo identified Brenen Thompson as a prospect for the Dolphins to watch at the 2026 NFL combine.
"Mississippi State wide receiver Brenen Thompson may run the fastest 40-yard dash of any wideout in Indy, with reported times under 4.30," Melo wrote. "Thompson would quickly replace the speed element the Dolphins lost when they made Hill a cap casualty."
Thompson, 22, was a four-star recruit out of Spearman High School in Spearman, Texas, before committing to Texas for the 2022 season. He spent one year with the Longhorns, two at Oklahoma and one final season at Mississippi State in his collegiate career.
In 40 games over his four years in college, Thompson caught 84 passes for 1,557 yards and 10 touchdowns. However, he really popped in 2025, earning All-SEC honors while catching 57 passes for a conference-leading 1,054 yards and six scores.
Thompson's size (5-foot-9, 170 pounds) doesn't scare opposing defenses, but his speed good make him a reliable weapon for an NFL offense. Most experts believe he'll be a mid-round pick, so the Dolphins could address other needs early and still take a swing on Thompson later on.
LSU baseball picked up its first loss of the season on Tuesday night, falling to McNeese in Baton Rouge. However, the Tigers' weekend rotation is yet to be beaten in 2026. Head coach Jay Johnson talked LSU's starting staff after the Tigers went 3-0 at the "Live Like Lou Jax Classic" last weekend. He's been impressed with Casan Evans, Cooper Moore, and William Schmidt.
"I have faith in all three of those guys," Johnson said. "They're winners, like they're not just starters, they're winners. That's going to give us a chance, and I think when you look at the strength of the team, and the position players, and the strength in the bullpen, they just need to go out and do their job."
Evans, the Friday starter, had a shaky outing to open his season against Milwaukee, allowing four runs on six hits in 3.1 innings. He recovered in a tight game versus Indiana, allowing two earned runs through five innings.
"If Casan pitches like that every time, we're going to win every game that he pitches," Johnson said.
A transfer from Kansas, Moore boasts a 3.09 ERA through two games. Against Notre Dame Saturday, he allowed three runs through 5.2 innings. Schmidt's 3.00 ERA is the best of the trio. He hurled five-shutout innings Sunday against UCF and struck out seven.
"I thought we were in control of the game, largely because of them," Johnson said. "It really, really simplifies things for the rest of the game if they perform like they did this weekend."
Nebraska softball moved up to No. 4 in the latest edition of the ESPN.com/USA Softball Collegiate Top 25. The rankings were announced on Tuesday afternoon.
Tennessee, Texas Tech, and Texas were the only teams ahead of the Huskers. Nebraska has an 11-4 record to start the season to this point, and has already secured five victories over opponents in the Top 25.
This includes victories over LSU,Texas A&M, and Texas Tech. They have yet to start conference play, but they are already tied for the fifth-best overall winning percentage in the Big Ten conference.
The program has set the stage for a solid season. This could be a group that has success in postseason play. Jordyn Frahm and Jesse Farrell Jr. have been two players in particular who have helped set the pace for the program over this stretch.
There is still a lot of season left to go. That said, this team has been able to perform at a high level.
Contact/Follow us @CornhuskersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Nebraska news, notes and opinions.
Sean Payton's putting the finishing touches on his 2026 coaching staff.
"[W]e’re close to filling out our staff," Payton said while speaking at the NFL combine on Tuesday. "We haven’t made any announcements, but I would say within the week, as soon as we have it, we’ll let you guys know.
"Sometimes these things, they get out early, but we’ve interviewed a number of people and I think — well, I wouldn’t say ideally — ideally, we’d be finished at this point, but I would say within the week we’ll have our full staff to announce."
Senior assistant: Open (Pete Carmichaeljoined Bills)
Denver lost three coaches to promotions with other clubs this offseason, just as they did in 2025. It's clear that NFL teams around the league believe Payton has an eye for coaching talent.
Harri Millard scored nine tries for Cardiff in 2024-25 [Huw Evans Picture Agency]
Cardiff aim to cause 'chaos' with ball in hand to boost their United Rugby Championship (URC) play-off hopes against Leinster on Friday.
The Blue and Blacks are boosted by the presence of Wales centre Ben Thomas, wing Mason Grady and hooker Liam Belcher to face the Irish province to the Arms Park on Friday (19:00 GMT).
They have been released from Six Nations duty for game time ahead of the final two rounds while Wales Under-20s wing Tom Bowen also features as a replacement for fifth-placed Cardiff.
Leinster are second in the tableand field a formidable side featuring All Blacks centre Rieko Ioane alongside Ireland and British and Irish Lions international Robbie Henshaw in midfield.
The champions lost three of their first four games this season but head to Cardiff on an 11-game winning run in all competitions since losing at Munster in October.
"They are a team that are very good in defence and can get on top of you," said centre Harri Millard.
"We are looking to use our skill to beat that line speed and get our wingers on the ball to cause chaos. To do that we need quick ball in midfield from the forwards and hopefully that unlocks the edges for our backs."
Cardiff are on 36 points from 11 games and have claimed match points from every URC fixture in 2025-26.
They have an 11-point lead over ninth-placed Ospreys and are in a strong position to go one better than last season, when they missed out on the top eight by one point.
In the four campaigns of the URC the final play-off spot has been earned by 48 twice and 50 twice.
"You can go on the average of previous seasons about what is needed but every year is different and there are still quite a few games left," said coach Corniel van Zyl.
"Teams can beat each other and we are just looking to put our plan on the pitch and go for it from game to game."
Hooker Belcher, who came off the bench for Wales at England in the first round of the Six Nations, captains Cardiff.
Full-back Jacob Beetham is selected on the wing while Alun Lawrence continues at blind-side flanker with Taine Basham getting the nod at number eight.
Tight-head prop Kieron Assiratti returns from a calf injury that forced him to pull out of the Six Nations squad to be among the replacements.
He is joined on the bench by academy back-row forward Evan Rees, who is set for a senior debut.
Cardiff are without wing Josh Adams and flankers Alex Mann and James Botham, who are set to feature for Wales against Ireland next weekend, along with tight-head prop Sam Wainwright, who is back-up for Tomas Francis and Archie Griffin.
The Irish 23 that stunned England at Twickenham featured 14 Leinster players, with Harry Byrne released to feature at the Arms Park.
How they line up
Cardiff: Winnett; Beetham, Millard, B Thomas, Grady; Sheedy, A Davies; Barratt, Belcher (capt), Sebastian, McNally, Nott, Lawrence, D Thomas, Basham.
Replacements: D Hughes, Southworth, Assiratti, Thornton, E Rees, Mulder, I Lloyd, Bowen.
Dundee have lost their past three league meetings with Hibernian, last losing four in a row to the Easter Road side in the top flight in April 2001.
After their 2-1 win in August, Hibs could win successive Scottish Premiership visits to Dundee for the first time since February 2019 (three in a row).
Over half of Dundee's points this season have been earned since Christmas (14/27). The Dark Blues won just three of their 18 league games prior to Christmas Day (D4 L11), but have since won four of their nine matches (D2 L3).
After their 2-1 victory at Celtic last time out, Hibs could win back-to-back away league outings for the first time since December 2024.
Simon Murray has scored three goals in his past two Premiership appearances, more than his previous 26 beforehand (2). Since he rejoined Dundee at the start of last season, Murray's 20 league goals are more than double any other player for the club (Lyall Cameron second with nine).
LSU football's transfer portal class stole the show, making it easy to forget that LSU's high school recruiting class was also one of the best in America. Several signees could make immediate impacts as true freshmen in 2026.
LSU signed the 11th-ranked 2026 recruiting class, according to 247Sports’ rankings. However, that ranking outside the top 10 belies the quality of the top of the class. LSU held the fourth-highest average player rating, thanks in large part to the signings of five-star defensive linemen Richard Anderson and Lamar Brown, who finished the recruiting cycle with 98 and 99 ratings, respectively.
ESPN highlighted Brown in its latest article, which named several incoming freshmen who are “facing pressure” in 2026. Brown was the No. 1 player in the 2026 SC Next 300 rankings, as was the case with most other recruiting services. ESPN’s Eli Lederman says it will be “imperative for him to make serious strides in Year 1,” despite the wealth of talent LSU added along its defensive line in the portal.
The main player standing in the path between Brown and a starting role next season is former Clemson defensive lineman Stephiylan Green, who signed with the Tigers as a four-star transfer and the No. 15 defensive lineman in the portal, per 247Sports’ rankings.
Barring a breakout year from Green, the door is open for Brown to take on a larger role as the year goes on, or even become the starter. Green was never especially productive or impactful on Clemson’s defense during his first three seasons with the team, and he doesn’t share the outstanding physical traits of his new counterpart.
Brown is expected to take some time to develop, but it would be a huge boost for the Tigers’ defense if he can become an impact player as a true freshman in 2026. It’s a bit of a stretch to say he’s under pressure, but there are certainly high expectations for Brown heading into next season.
Caleb Williams showed all the makings of a top quarterback in the NFL, and the Bears' success this season was a direct reflection of that. Caleb delivered seven game-winning drives this season and one of the best playoff comebacks in NFL history versus the rival Green Bay Packers. Yet there is still more room to grow for the rising star in Chicago with the Bears.
In a recent Bears Wire article, Alyssa Barbieri highlights an NFL analyst, Matt Bowen, who has big expectations for Caleb Williams next season. Here is the latest on what was said about Caleb Williams:
"NFL analyst Matt Bowen appeared on the "Hoge & Jahns" podcast recently, where he explained how he envisions Williams becoming an All-Pro quarterback in his third NFL season."
Here is what Matt Bowen thinks Caleb needs to improve on:
"If you get Caleb to play in rhythm at a higher rate, now you're talking about someone who can be an All-Pro player," Bowen said. "That's what he can be because he has the highlight plays off of that. He has the plays that, from a coaching perspective, I can't teach. So there should be incredibly high expectations for the Bears' offense and for Caleb Williams going into his third pro season. Now, when he gets back to Halas Hall in the offseason, it's not learning new terminology. It's not watching tape of the Detroit Lions. Now, you're sitting in those meeting rooms yourself, scouting yourself."
Caleb Williams was spectacular in the most important moments of the Bears' games this season due to his special ability off-schedule. If Caleb Williams can control that and maintain his clutch ability, but be more in rhythm for the rest of the game on a consistent basis, he will be an even more dangerous player.
Ben Johnson's goal was to get Caleb Williams more on schedule, but also let him do what he does best. This season, that plan fully came to full circle enough for the Bears to go 11-6, win the NFC North, and win a playoff game. It is clear that the Bears still can get even better, especially Caleb Williams. Knowing the offense more and having experience with what Ben Johnson wants to do will make this offense more effective alone next season.
ESPN's Seth Wickersham predicted the Week 1 starting quarterback for each team in 2026, and for the Indianapolis Colts, it's not Daniel Jones.
Now, it's not that Wickersham doesn't believe that Jones will be a member of the Colts, but rather, coming off an Achilles injury, he doesn't expect him to be healthy for Week 1.
So, who does Wickersham have starting for the Colts? Well, it's a very familiar face in Gardner Minshew.
"The journeyman had more success playing for Shane Steichen in 2023 than at any other point in his career," wrote Wickersham. "Because Minshew's star has fallen, he would be a cheap option for the Colts to pair with second-year QB Riley Leonard while they wait for Jones to heal."
There are a few holes that we are going to poke in this. One, do we know that Jones won't be ready for Week 1? That's probably the safe bet, given the injury, but after the season, Jones did say he expects to be ready for the start of training camp.
But even if Jones is still sidelined, my guess is that the Colts would start Leonard over making another outside addition. In his Week 18 debut against a very good Houston defense, Leonard impressed. Also, as of now, Anthony Richardson remains on the roster.
So, although Minshew had previous success in Indianapolis and with Shane Steichen, reuniting to be the Colts' backup doesn't feel all that likely.
Hannah Cain has scored five goals in 22 Wales appearances [FAW]
Wales international Hannah Cain says the mental health of female players can be affected by "really ugly" social media abuse.
Leicester City forward Cain is with the Wales squad preparing for next Tuesday's opening Women's World Cup qualifying game against the Czech Republic.
Earlier this season, the 27-year-old posted on social media that "enough is enough" following abuse from people "hiding behind a keyboard".
Cain has now explained that "abusive messages after pretty much every game" for her club prompted her to speak out.
"I think over the years as the women's game has grown, it's opened up more of a platform for people to have their opinion and share their voices," Cain said.
"I think unfortunately social media has become a place where people can say whatever they want whether it's good, bad, ugly and sometimes the ugly is really ugly."
Former Everton player Cain has been at Leicester since 2020.
The Foxes are in the midst of a difficult season, with Rick Passmoor's team currently bottom of the Women's Super League (WSL).
Cain posted about the abuse in November, when Leicester suffered heavy defeats against Brighton and Arsenal.
Hannah Cain is in her fifth WSL season with Leicester having helped the club reach the top flight in 2020-21 [Getty Images]
"During that time I think that we weren't playing badly at a club and I wasn't playing badly but certain people decided to just send abusive messages after pretty much every game and it got to a point where I thought this is not OK," Cain added.
"It didn't matter what I did on the pitch and it does affect you at some point.
"You see so much of it you start thinking, are they right? Obviously you know that they're not but I think it was becoming so much that sometimes you have to speak out."
Cain believes people can forget that footballers "are actual humans", with abuse affecting players' lives away from the pitch as well as family members.
Therefore, Cain says, she will use her platform to try to prevent further abuse.
"I think when you do say something, people start deleting all the negative comments they've made and they think that's OK," she added.
"But if I can have a tiny, tiny effect on people maybe thinking before they write something, then I'll absolutely do that."
"You have to take the good with the bad sometimes and I understand people can get carried away and let their emotions get away from them, but I think [it is good to have] a reminder that it can have a serious effect on people's mental health."
World Cup would be 'absolutely incredible'
Wales' win over Switzerland in December was their only victory in 2025 [FAW]
Cain scored a fine goal in that friendly success and is likely to be a key attacking player for Wilkinson as Wales' women attempt to reach a World Cup for the first time.
The Czech Republic game marks the start of a new era given that Jess Fishlock, Wales' greatest player, will be in the dugout rather than on the pitch having retired from international football last October.
Wales, who host Montenegro in Llanelli in their second qualifier on Saturday, 7 March, can expect a stern test against a Czech Republic side who are ranked 31st in the world, one place above Wilkinson's team.
But Wales start Group B1 with top spot as their target, given that finishing first would give them a more favourable route through the play-offs for the 2027 World Cup.
Having been part of the Wales squad at Euro 2025, Cain says qualification for next year's tournament in Brazil would be "absolutely incredible".
"Obviously our first major tournament last year was absolutely immense and you never think it's going to get any better," she said.
"Then once that's done you're like OK, what's next? And then you're like, amazing, World Cup in Brazil – absolutely, why not?"
George Munsey will be available for all of Notts' T20 Blast games in 2026 [Getty Images]
Notts Outlaws have signed Scotland batter George Munsey for this year's T20 Blast campaign.
The 33-year-old has featured 155 times for his country in white-ball matches and most recently played a part in their T20 World Cup campaign, which ended in the group stage earlier in February.
He top scored with 84 in Scotland's only win in the competition against Italy.
Munsey has scored more than 2,700 runs playing T20 franchise cricket, with stints in Bangladesh, Nepal and United Arab Emirates coming among spells in the Blast with Hampshire and Kent.
"I feel like I have a lot of experience that I can bring to this group, and hopefully that will help us have a successful year in the Blast," he told Notts' website.
While Notts have won the competition twice - most recently in 2020 - they have failed to reach the knockout stage of the T20 Blast in the past two seasons.
Notts head coach Peter Moores said Munsey brings batting experience to a side he hopes to develop into one that "can really push for honours in this format".
"There will still be plenty of opportunities for our homegrown players to push their case for selection, though George gives us additional depth and experience," Moores said.
"That will be important as we head into another busy season in all formats of the game."
He had missed three-and-a-half weeks with a dead leg, but scored twice in the 5-2 win over League One leaders Cardiff City on Saturday.
Head coach Tom Cleverley says Tolaj has a muscle tear in the same leg that had been injured, but that the issues are unrelated.
"For his first game back, the occasion and the opposition, he went absolutely full throttle and got a small muscle tear from the weekend, so we'll be without Tolly for four weeks," he told BBC Radio Devon.
Tolaj has scored 17 goals since moving to Argyle in August from Port Vale and become a key player in the side.
Cleverley says he is happy that the Pilgrims did not bring the Swiss striker back from injury too early:
"Cardiff was very safe for him to play and I think his intensity levels meant that he pushed to the absolute maximum, which he can do," he added.
"Can he do that after not playing for four weeks? We've seen no.
"We don't have the luxury of going 'Tolly's return to play is 20 minutes, 30 minutes, 60 minutes,' we need points now.
"Every time a footballer steps over that white line there's risk attached to it and you never want to be over-cautious.
"We all sit comfortably, the player, the medical team, myself, with the decision for him to play at the weekend and unfortunately he's not come through it."
Salford City assistant head coach Alex Bruce and defender Luke Garbutt have been charged by the FA over their conduct during a fiery encounter against Cheltenham Town on 21 February.
The defender, 32, has been charged with failing to leave the pitch promptly after being sent off and also with using foul and/or abusive language towards the match official after the final whistle.
Bruce has also been charged for using foul and/or abusive language towards a match official after the final whistle had sounded.
Both players have until 2 March to provide a response to the charges.
Along with Jordan Mailata, Cam Jurgens, Lane Johnson, and Landon Dickerson, Roseman envisions Tyler Steen as the starting right guard moving forward.
“We got four Pro Bowl players coming back on our offensive line, which is exciting. We feel like we got some young talent there, as well. Tyler Steen will be in his second year as a starter, and we haven’t hit free agency or the draft.”
Steen is coming off his first full season as a starter, appearing in all 17 games for the Eagles last year. He allowed just two sacks in 589 pass-blocking snaps, all coming at right guard.
While the offensive line struggled at times, especially in the run game, Steen was a steady presence and held his own. Continuity will be critical while new OL coach Chris Kuper attempts to fill Jeff Stoutland's shoes.
Negele Borena, Gore Metu and Debre Markos are getting ready to welcome more visitors, and for many residents the prospect feels personal as well as practical. Families who once spent long hours on rough roads to reach Addis Ababa will soon be able to board a short domestic flight instead, while small guesthouses, guides and café owners quietly hope that new arrivals will turn curiosity into much needed income. With Ethiopian Airlines preparing to launch scheduled services to the three new airports by mid April 2026, these communities are stepping into Ethiopia’s tourism spotlight rather than watching it from afar.
Ethiopian Airlines, Africa’s largest network carrier and Ethiopia’s flag airline, has confirmed that Negele Borena, Gore Metu and Debre Markos will each receive three passenger flights a week. The routes, operated by the carrier’s domestic fleet, will expand its national network to 26 destinations and significantly strengthen internal air connectivity. Government aligned communications frame this expansion as a strategic step that supports both regional economic growth and the long term development of tourism across southern, western and northern Ethiopia.
From a tourism lens, each of the three destinations offers a distinct promise once the airports open. Negele Borena, in Ethiopia’s south, serves as a natural gateway to Rift Valley landscapes and pastoral cultures that can anchor community based experiences and cross border itineraries with Kenya. Gore Metu in the west sits close to lush highlands and coffee growing zones, well placed for birdwatching, agro tourism and nature retreats that can appeal to both domestic and international visitors. Debre Markos, in the Amhara region, connects with established northern cultural and faith routes, offering new combinations with historic sites for pilgrims and heritage travellers.
Officials and airline leaders repeatedly underline that better air access acts as a catalyst rather than an end in itself. Shorter travel times encourage more Ethiopians to explore their own country over long weekends, while foreign tourists can fit additional stops into limited holiday schedules without exhausting overland transfers. In practical terms, this shift can drive investment in small lodges, tour operations, car hire services and local guiding, with tourism revenue circulating through markets, farms and craft cooperatives.
The timing also fits Ethiopia’s broader aviation and tourism ambitions. Ethiopian Airlines recently added Yabello as its twenty third domestic destination and continues to invest in infrastructure upgrades, while plans for the future Bishoftu International Airport indicate long horizon confidence in passenger growth. As the domestic network thickens, Addis Ababa’s role as a hub becomes more attractive to long haul visitors who want seamless connections to smaller cities.
For tour operators, the new airports open fresh storytelling opportunities. Packages can now link classic attractions with emerging ones, for example combining Addis Ababa and northern heritage circuits with side trips to Debre Markos, or pairing Rift Valley lakes with Negele Borena’s pastoral landscapes. Coffee themed journeys can include Gore Metu’s hinterland alongside existing western and southern routes, giving Ethiopia another angle in the competitive global coffee travel niche. Such product diversity helps the country appeal to repeat visitors who want to go beyond first timers’ itineraries.
Government messaging around the expansion consistently stresses inclusion and access. By making flights available to historically underserved regions, authorities aim to distribute tourism benefits more evenly and ensure that smaller communities can participate in the sector. If demand grows as projected, frequencies to the new airports could later increase, further integrating these towns into the national tourism economy.
As Ethiopian Airlines works towards the first mid-April departures, anticipation quietly builds on both sides of the cabin door. For travellers, seeing Negele Borena, Gore Metu or Debre Markos on a booking screen will soon signal an invitation to discover unfamiliar landscapes and communities that have long waited off the main trail. For residents, each touchdown will carry more than passengers and bags; it will bring new stories, opportunities and connections that can slowly transform tourism from a distant idea into a shared local experience.