Author: rb809rb

  • 2026 NBA trade tracker: Full deal details, grades, analysis

    The NBA trade deadline came and went Thursday, and Giannis Antetokounmpo, the biggest name on the market, once again stayed with the Milwaukee Bucks.

    Here are the full details of who went where at the 2025-26 trade deadline:

    Celtics trade Xavier Tillman to Hornets (Feb. 5)

    Hornets get: Xavier Tillman, $3.5 million

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    Celtics get: Salary, tax savings

    Hornets trade Tyus Jones to Mavericks (Feb. 5)

    Mavericks get: Tyus Jones

    Hornets get: Malaki Branham

    Pacers get: Ivica Zubac and Kobe Brown

    Clippers get: Bennedict Mathurin, Isaiah Jackson, Pacers 2026 first-round pick (protected Nos. 1-4 and 10-30), 2029 Pacers first-round pick, 2028 Mavericks second-round pick

    76ers trade Eric Gordon to Grizzlies (Feb. 5)

    Grizzlies get: Eric Gordon, 2032 second-round pick swap

    76ers get: 2032 second-round pick swap

    Celtics trading Josh Minott to Nets (Feb. 5)

    Nets get: Josh Minott

    Celtics get: Salary/tax savings

    Nuggets trade Hunter Tyson to Nets (Feb. 5)

    Nuggets get: 2026 second-round pick (least favorable of Clippers or Hawks)

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    Nets get: Hunter Tyson, 2032 second-round pick

    Knicks gets: Jose Alvarado

    Pelicans get: Dalen Terry, two second-round picks and cash

    Suns get: Cole Anthony and Amir Coffey

    Bucks get: Ousmane Dieng and Nigel Hayes-Davis

    Bulls get: Nick Richards

    Jazz get: Chris Boucher and Denver’s 2027 second-round pick

    Celtics get: John Tonje, salary/tax savings

    Lakers get: Luke Kennard

    Hawks get: Gabe Vincent and a 2032 second-round pick

    Bulls get: Rob Dillingham, Leonard Miller, 2026 second-round pick (least favorable of Nuggets or Warriors); Cavaliers 2027 second-round pick; 2031 second-round pick (most favorable of Timberwolves or Warriors); 2032 second-round pick (most favorable of Suns or Rockets)

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    Timberwolves get: Ayo Dosunmu and Julian Phillips

    Knicks trade Guerschon Yabusele to Bulls (Feb. 4)

    Knicks get: Dalen Terry

    Bulls get: Guerschon Yabusele

    Warriors trade Trayce Jackson-Davis to Raptors (Feb. 4)

    Raptors get: Trayce Jackson-Davis

    Warriors get: Lakers 2026 second-round pick

    Warriors get: Kristaps Porzingis

    Hawks get: Jonathan Kuminga, Buddy Hield

    Trade grades: Who won the deal?

    Magic trade Tyus Jones to Hornets (Feb. 4)

    Hornets get: Tyus Jones, 2027 second-round pick (least favorable of Celtics or Magic), 2028 second-round pick

    Magic get: Cash considerations

    Jazz get: Lonzo Ball, 2028 and 2032 second-round picks from Cavs

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    Hawks get: Jock Landale

    Cavaliers get: Salary and tax savings

    Clippers get: rights to Vanja Marinković

    Raptors get: Chris Paul

    Nets get: Ochai Agbaji, 2032 Raptors second-round pick, cash

    Bulls get: Collin Sexton, Ousmane Dieng, 2029 second-round pick (least favorable of Nuggets or Hornets), Knicks 2031 second-round pick, Nuggets 2031 second-round pick

    Hornets get: Coby White, Mike Conley Jr., 2029 second-round pick (least favorable of Hawks or Heat)

    Thunder get: Mason Plumlee Jr.

    Trade grades: Who won the deal?

    76ers get: Rockets 2026 first-round pick, 2027 second-round pick (most favorable of Thunder, Rockets, Pacers or Heat), Thunder 2028 second-round pick, Bucks 2028 second-round pick

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    Thunder get: Jared McCain

    Trade grades: Who won the deal?

    Mavericks get: Khris Middleton, AJ Johnson, Malaki Branham, Marvin Bagley III, Thunder 2026 first-round pick, Warriors 2030 first-round pick (top-20 protected), Suns 2026 second-round pick, Bulls 2027 second-round pick, Rockets 2029 second-round pick

    Wizards get: Anthony Davis, Jaden Hardy, D’Angelo Russell and Dante Exum

    Trade grades: Who won the deal?

    Clippers get: Darius Garland and 2026 second-round pick

    Cavaliers get: James Harden

    Trade grades: Who won the deal?

    Bulls get: Anfernee Simons and second-round pick

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    Celtics get: Nikola Vučević and second-round pick

    Trade grades: Who won the deal?

    Bulls get: Jaden Ivey, Mike Conley Jr.

    Pistons get: Kevin Huerter, Dario Saric, 2026 first-round protected swap from Timberwolves

    Timberwolves get: Cash

    Jazz get: Jaren Jackson Jr., John Konchar, Jock Landale and Vince Williams Jr.

    Grizzlies get: Walter Clayton Jr., Kyle Anderson, Taylor Hendricks, Georges Niang, 2027 first-round pick (most favorable of Jazz, Cavaliers or Timberwolves), Lakers 2027 first-round pick, Suns 2031 first-round pick

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    Trade grades: Who won the deal?

    Blazers get: Vit Krejci

    Hawks get: Duop Reath, 2027 second-round pick and 2030 second-round pick

    Cavs get: Keon Ellis and Dennis Schröder

    Kings get: De’Andre Hunter

    Bulls get: Dario Šarić, Cavaliers 2027 second-round pick, Kings 2029 second-round pick

    Trade grades: Who won the deal?

    Wizards get: Trae Young

    Hawks get: CJ McCollum and Corey Kispert

    Trade grades: Who won the deal?

  • World Baseball Classic 2026: Team USA roster finalized as Aaron Judge, Paul Skenes headline group of MLB stars

    The 2026 World Baseball Classic is a month away, and Team USA’s roster is finalized.

    The star-studded group is headlined by reigning back-to-back AL MVP Aaron Judge and NL Cy Young Award winner Paul Skenes. It also includes Clayton Kershaw, who announced his retirement at the end of the 2025 season but will make one last appearance in the WBC.

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    Here’s a snapshot of the top players and, below that, a full breakdown of the 30-man roster, which was announced Thursday:

    Team USA roster for the 2026 World Baseball Classic

    Team USA position players

    • C Cal Raleigh, Seattle Mariners

    • C Will Smith, Los Angeles Dodgers

    • 1B Bryce Harper, Philadelphia Phillies

    • 1B Paul Goldschmidt, free agent

    • 2B Brice Turang, Milwaukee Brewers

    • 3B Gunnar Henderson, Baltimore Orioles

    • 3B Alex Bregman, Chicago Cubs

    • SS Bobby Witt Jr., Kansas City Royals

    • INF Ernie Clement, Toronto Blue Jays

    • OF Aaron Judge, New York Yankees

    • OF Corbin Carroll, Arizona Diamondbacks

    • OF Pete Crow-Armstrong, Chicago Cubs

    • OF Byron Buxton, Minnesota Twins

    • DH Kyle Schwarber, Philadelphia Phillies

    Team USA pitchers

    • SP Clayton Kershaw, retired from MLB

    • SP Tarik Skubal, Detroit Tigers

    • SP Paul Skenes, Pittsburgh Pirates

    • SP Joe Ryan, Minnesota Twins

    • SP Logan Webb, San Francisco Giants

    • SP Nolan McLean, New York Mets

    • SP Clay Holmes, New York Mets

    • SP Matthew Boyd, Chicago Cubs

    • SP Michael Wacha, Kansas City Royals

    • RP Mason Miller, San Diego Padres

    • RP Griffin Jax, Tampa Bay Rays

    • RP Garrett Whitlock, Boston Red Sox

    • RP Garrett Cleavinger, Tampa Bay Rays

    • RP David Bednar, New York Yankees

    • RP Gabe Speier, Seattle Mariners

    • RP Brad Keller, Philadelphia Phillies

    The 2026 World Baseball Classic will begin March 5 and run through March 17. Team USA will be looking for redemption after falling to Shohei Ohtani and Team Japan in the final in 2023.

    Full rosters for the WBC can be found here.

  • Padres to reportedly take bids for potential sale; Warriors owner Joe Lacob among interested suitors

    The San Diego Padres are reportedly moving closer to the franchise going up for sale, with opening bids for the team expected to be submitted by the end of February, according to The Athletic.

    One of the people presumably interested in bidding is Golden State Warriors team owner Joe Lacob, The Athletic’s Dennis Lin and Mike Vorkunov reported. While Lacob has looked into the possibility of buying the Padres, he has not committed to making a bid, at least publicly. However, he has previously made attempts to buy the Athletics, Los Angeles Angels and Los Angeles Dodgers.

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    Lacob, 70, has owned the Warriors since 2010, overseeing a franchise that has won four NBA championships and has become the most valuable team in the league, according to CNBC and Forbes. His sports team portfolio also includes the WNBA expansion Golden State Valkyries.

    PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 30:  A New Era San Diego Padres baseball cap is seen against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the game at PNC Park on April 30, 2022 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  (Photo by Justin K. Aller/Getty Images)

    The San Diego Padres could begin taking bids from potential buyers by the end of February, according to reports. (Photo by Justin K. Aller/Getty Images)

    (Justin K. Aller via Getty Images)

    Others who have reportedly shown interest in purchasing the Padres include Dan Friedkin and José E. Feliciano, according to Sportico. Friedkin’s Pursuit Sports group currently owns Premier League club Everton and AS Roma in Serie A. He also pursued buying the Boston Celtics before that franchise was sold to Bill Chisholm and Symphony Technology Group last spring. Feliciano and his private equity firm, Clearlake Capital, own Chelsea in the Premier League.

    The path to a sale of the Padres was cleared earlier this week, when Sheel Seidler, the widow of late team owner Peter Seidler, settled her lawsuit against her brothers-in-law, Bob and Matt Seidler. The lawsuit, filed in January 2025, alleged that the brothers committed “breaches of fiduciary duty and fraud” as trustees of the Seidler Trust that controls the franchise.

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    Peter Seidler died in November 2023 at the age of 63 after a months-long illness. He became the Padres’ chairman and largest stakeholder after being part of the group that purchased the franchise in 2012.

    John Seidler currently controls the family trust, and thus the Padres, after being approved by MLB owners a year ago. He was not named in Sheel Seidler’s lawsuit.

    The lawsuit also accused the Seidler brothers of exploring a relocation of the team. Despite being based in the Bay Area, Lacob reportedly would not consider moving the Padres out of Southern California.

    The Padres were valued at $2.3 billion by Sportico last year. The highest sale price for an MLB team was the New York Mets, which Steve Cohen purchased for $2.4 billion in 2020. The Seidler family is reportedly seeking a sale price closer to $3 billion, according to The Athletic.

  • Eileen Gu, Olympian by day, millionaire social media star by night

    LIVIGNO, Italy — On Jan. 9, freestyle skier Eileen Gu posted on Instagram a “Day in my Life” video commemorating the one-month countdown to the Milan Cortina Olympics.

    Glimpses of Gu brushing her teeth, eating breakfast, riding a ski lift, practicing tricks on a giant airbag, cooling down with a 5 kilometer run, talking to the media, completing a doping test, and reading a book while she’s in a hyperbaric chamber were all stuffed into a 29-second Instagram reel.

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    Within 10 days, it generated more than a million views.

    So it’s probably no coincidence that Gu, the American-born dual gold medal winner who chose to compete for China in 2019, was the fourth highest-paid female athlete of 2025.  According to Sportico, all but $20,000 of her $23 million came from endorsements.

    While sponsorships have always been crucial to the earning potential of Olympic athletes, who generally aren’t raking in huge sums of prize money, financial success no longer hinges on whose image lands on the Wheaties box.

    Now most of it happens on social media, where the line between Olympic athletes and influencers has been blurred — usually to the benefit of their pocketbooks as this Winter Games draws close.

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    “The number of Olympians who have become more popular and made money in the Olympics has grown exponentially,” said Doug Shabelman, the CEO of Chicago-based Burns Entertainment, a firm that matches celebrities and athletes with marketing opportunities. “Now everybody, whether you win or lose, can be an influencer. Before you had to win gold medals, you had to do something special. Now social media has leveled the playing field, and the marketability of these athletes is 365 days a year.”

    (Amy Monks/Yahoo Sports illustration)

    (Amy Monks/Yahoo Sports illustration)

    Gu is among the handful of Olympic athletes at the top of that food chain along with the likes of Simone Biles and Lindsey Vonn. It’s no surprise given Gu’s success in the sport and her endorsement potential in China, which likely played at least some role in her choice to represent her mother’s homeland rather than the more crowded American market.

    But you don’t need to be the most successful winter sports athlete in a country of 1.4 billion people to leverage social media for endorsement dollars.

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    Take freestyle skier Alex Ferreira. Once a year, he puts on a prosthetic mask, a gray wig and fake facial hair to make him look like a skiing has-been, goes to the slopes with a film crew, talks trash to younger skiers and shocks crowds as he executes Olympic-level tricks.

    The character, “Hot Dog Hans,” was inspired by Kyrie Irving’s portrayal of streetball legend “Uncle Drew.” Though it started out as a one-time gag a few years ago, Ferreira realized within 15 minutes of his first day in costume that it was something he could draw out into a multi-episode series of short films.

    The full Hans skits now generate hundreds of thousands of views on YouTube, with the clips drawing millions on Instagram. And while it may have started as a fun distraction, it has become a high-profile example of how an Olympic athlete who is not particularly famous in the mainstream world can find a niche that leads to dollars.

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    “We’re in this day and age where your main job is to compete, learn new tricks, go to these contests and win them,” Ferreira said. “But the other half of the business is gaining sponsors, so you need to create content as well. I’m a professional skier, but I’m also an influencer in a way. Basically, when you think the job is over, you have to get back and get on the computer and start cranking out content. When I started, it was much less than that.”

    Though the content game does require more time outside of traditional training and media obligations, it keeps many athletes in the mix during those four-year gaps between Olympics when they don’t get as much mainstream attention. And then, once an Olympics begins, you never really know what’s going to hit.

    One of the biggest social media stars of the Paris Games was Henrik Christiansen, a Norwegian swimmer who did not finish better than 20th in any of his three events but went viral for videos about chocolate chip muffins in the athletes’ village. The “Muffin Man” now has more than 500,000 followers on TikTok and is still trading off the joke. One of his most popular recent videos from last October shows him whisking cocoa powder into a mixing bowl trying to replicate a recipe he’s watching on television.

    “I’m 56, and our generation, we still look at it like, ‘We want to see the winners and the great stories,’” Shabelman said. “But a different generation has different things they’re more interested in, and there are so many different avenues now, so many different ways to get your story and your personality out that it changed the game in a big way on the marketing side.

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    “It’s not just the winners anymore. Engagement on social media with fans is so important to marketers because they don’t just want to see how many people look at videos. They want to see who’s engaging, who has that accessibility and who has something that other people don’t.”

    It also helps that Olympic sports, particularly in the winter, have great visuals that lend themselves to social media. Whether it’s a striking costume being worn by a figure skater, a gravity-defying trick on a snowboard or simply the backdrop of a snow-capped mountain, Winter Olympians don’t necessarily have to stretch far outside their comfort zone to create eye-catching content.

    Many of Gu’s posts, for instance, have nothing to do with sports and fall more into the category of modeling or a peek into the lifestyle of a rich, young woman who travels the world like a true celebrity and hangs out with other celebrities. They are slickly produced and undeniably targeted to demographics that are not watching the Freestyle Ski World Cup.

    “We are still a society that does value attractiveness and different elements that we all have come to know about people who are endorsers,” Shabelman said. “But then you also add on being really good at building great content, you have a lot of (famous) friends you might tag in a post and that might get you even more followers.”

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    Though not every Olympic athlete handles their social media as seriously or professionally as Gu, it’s now just a fact of life that maximizing endorsement potential — which is what keeps many of these Olympians going in sports that don’t offer big prize money — often runs through Instagram or TikTok.

    “Content creation is what’s happening right now,” snowboarder Jamie Anderson said. “It’s bigger than almost anything. There are YouTubers making more money than NFL players. So it really doesn’t matter what I think about it, it’s happening. You kind of have to move with the waves. It’s definitely the future of marketing and sports. Times have changed quick.”

  • Guardians’ Emmanuel Clase accused of manipulating pitches in 48 different games as wire fraud trial looms

    The allegations against Emmanuel Clase appear to stretch much further than previously known.

    A court filing has revealed that the Cleveland Guardians closer is accused of manipulating pitches in 48 different MLB games over the span of two years, according to ESPN’s David Purdum. That’s far more than the nine specific games identified in the federal government’s indictment last year.

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    Including playoffs, Clase appeared in 178 games ranging from May 2023 to June 2025, the timeline of the scheme alleged by prosecutors. If the 48-game figure is correct, that would mean Clase threw suspicious pitches (i.e. intentional balls to allegedly help his co-conspirators win prop bets) in 27% of his appearances with the Guardians in that span.

    That figure reportedly comes from Clase’s co-defendant, Guardians teammate Luis Ortiz, who is accused of manipulating only two pitches in June 2025. It was Ortiz who was first implicated in the scandal, but his attorneys are now reportedly requesting that his case be severed from Clase’s due to “markedly different levels of culpability.”

    Basically, Ortiz’s camp is arguing that the case against Clase is so overwhelming, it hurts Ortiz’s case to be at the same defendant’s table. From ESPN:

    In Thursday’s filing, Ortiz’s attorney pointed to this difference in scale and emphasized that the indictment did not contain evidence of Ortiz communicating directly with bettors.

    Georgalis argued that a jury presented “with 26 months of alleged criminal conduct by Mr. Clase — including suspect pitches during 48 games, dozens of communications with [a bettor], cash transfers and coordination of illegal wagers” could find Ortiz guilty by association.

    Another court record reportedly shows that a judge asked prosecutors to provide Clase’s attorneys with evidence for suspicious pitches:

    “[Clase] has identified at least 250 pitches on which bets were placed, so the Court encouraged the government to disclose discovery to [Clase] as to any additional pitches that it alleges were included in the conspiracy,” a record of the court proceeding states.

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    Clase and Ortiz were indicted in November on charges of wire fraud conspiracy, honest services wire fraud conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy and conspiracy to influence sporting contests by bribery. They have both pleaded not guilty to the charges, which carry a total maximum sentence of decades in prison.

    Their trial is scheduled for May.

    The pitchers officially remain members of the Guardians organization, but they remain on the restricted list (i.e. unpaid leave). In addition to prison time, they face a lifetime ban from baseball, pending MLB’s investigation into the allegations.

    Clase is alleged to have done all this despite his status as one of the top closers in baseball and a contract that would have paid him $6.4 million in 2026, with a pair of team options for $10 million each in 2027 and 2028.

  • Cowboys will play NFL’s first game in Rio de Janeiro, team’s first international game in 12 years

    “America’s Team” is going international for the first time in 12 years.

    The Dallas Cowboys will be one of the participating teams in the NFL’s first game in Rio de Janeiro next season.

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    The date and time of the game, as well as the Cowboys’ opponent, will be announced at a later date, per a league release on Thursday night. It will be played in the Maracanã Stadium, which famously hosted the 2014 FIFA World Cup final.

    The NFL has already played two games in Brazil, but those took place in São Paulo at Corinthians Arena, where the Philadelphia Eagles defeated the Green Bay Packers on Sept. 6, 2024, and the Los Angeles Chargers bested the Kansas City Chiefs on Sept. 5, 2025. Both were season openers, and both were decided by one score.

    The Cowboys’ game in Rio will be their first international date since 2014, when they faced off against the Jacksonville Jaguars in London.

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    [Get more Cowboys news: Dallas team feed]

    It will also mark the franchise’s 11th time playing an international game, however, nine of those matchups have arrived during the preseason, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, which listed those 10 prior games as such:

    • 2014 vs. Jacksonville Jaguars | London

    • 2001 vs. Oakland Raiders | Mexico City (preseason)

    • 2000 vs. Atlanta Falcons | Tokyo (preseason)

    • 1998 vs. New England Patriots | Mexico City (preseason)

    • 1996 vs. Kansas City Chiefs | Monterrey (preseason)

    • 1995 vs. Buffalo Bills | Toronto (preseason)

    • 1994 vs. Houston Oilers | Mexico City (preseason)

    • 1993 vs. Detroit Lions | London (preseason)

    • 1992 vs. Houston Oilers | Tokyo (preseason)

    • 1986 vs. Chicago Bears | London (preseason)

    The NFL also announced Thursday that the San Francisco 49ers and Los Angeles Rams will play in the league’s first game in Melbourne, Australia, next season.

    In total, there will be an NFL-record nine international games during the 2026 campaign.

  • Crotch-gate: The biggest controversy heading into the Winter Olympics involves … ski jumping?

    MILAN — Adrian Livelten hunched over a sewing machine last March on the eve of the men’s ski jumping competition at the Nordic World Ski Championships.

    The suit technician for Norway’s national ski jumping team brazenly made alterations to suits belonging to the country’s two top contenders after those suits had already passed inspection. Livelten did this in plain view of Norway ski jumping head coach Magnus Brevik, seated in a chair halfway across the room.

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    What neither Livelten nor Brevik realized at the time was that someone was recording them in secrecy from behind a curtain, someone who intended to distribute the video far and wide the following day. The damning footage shared by the anonymous whistleblower shook the sport of ski jumping, bringing out into the open the cheating that happened behind closed doors.

    When officials from the International Ski and Snowboard Federation (FIS) seized suits belonging to reigning Olympic champion Marius Lindvik and fellow Norwegian Johann André Forfang, they found rules violations that initially went unnoticed during the competition. Stiffer, non-elastic thread had been sewn into the suits to pull down the crotch area during flight, increasing the surface area and creating more aerodynamic lift in a sport where inches can be the difference between medaling and missing the podium.

    24 January 2026, Bavaria, Oberstdorf: Nordic skiing, ski jumping, ski flying, men, World Championships, trial round: Johann Andre Forfang (Norway) in action. Photo: Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa (Photo by Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/picture alliance via Getty Images)

    Norway’s Johann Andre Forfang competes at the World Championships in January. (Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/Getty Images)

    (picture alliance via Getty Images)

    “Probably the most shocking part was that it was Norway because they’ve always been considered one of the more standup teams,” said Johnny Spillane, the first American to medal in the sport of Nordic combined, which consists of ski jumping and cross-country skiing. “Everyone is going to push the limits. That hasn’t changed and that probably will never change, but this was deliberately altering a suit after it had been tested in order to cheat. This was the most blatant cheating I’ve heard of.”

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    The Norway cheating scandal highlighted two irrefutable facts about the crotch-obsessed sport of ski jumping on the precipice of the 2026 Winter Olympics. There is, as Finnish coach Petter Kukkonen put it last April, “a culture of cheating” in ski jumping. And the battleground between unscrupulous teams and rule-upholding regulators is often below the belt.

    Male ski jumpers must wear tight-fitting suits that are no more than 4 centimeters larger than their body measurements at any point. Most national teams seek to find every millimeter they can because a bigger, baggier suit catches more wind and provides more lift during flight than a smaller one does.

    Fittingly, the most advantageous place to enlarge a ski jumper’s suit is the crotch area. Adding just a centimeter of fabric to the circumference of that part of a suit increases flight distance by approximately 2.8 meters — or more than 9 feet — according to a study published by Frontiers in Sports and Active Living in October 2025.

    Athletes chasing that competitive advantage have resorted to trickery when having their body dimensions measured prior to a competition. The more they reduce the distance between their inseam and the floor when FIS equipment controllers record their body measurements, the lower regulators will allow the crotch of their suit to hang while airborne.

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    In November 2020, Kukkonen told Finland’s leading tabloid newspaper that athletes were stuffing dish cloths and sponges in their underwear during body measuring. In a recent appearance on the Skirious Problems podcast, Austria’s Mika Vermeulen revealed that when he competed in nordic combined earlier in his career, veterans told him before his first body measuring, “It’s very important to tape your c*** back.”

    Vermeulen later described ski jumpers putting modeling clay in their underwear to lower their crotch-to-floor measurement by five centimeters.

    “People used to cheat a f*** ton,” Vermeulen said.

    Salacious stories like those were already pushing ski jumping out of the margins and into the mainstream entering these Olympics. Then the German tabloid Bild sparked further curiosity in January when it reported that ski jumpers have worn condom-like sleeves filled with hyaluronic acid to enlarge themselves before measurement.

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    On Thursday, the eve of the Opening Ceremony of the 2026 Olympics, reporters asked World Anti-Doping Agency director general Olivier Niggli about that report. Niggli said that “If anything was to come to the surface, we would look at it and see if it is doping related.”

    “When I read that article, all I could do was shake my head,” USA Ski Jumping and Nordic Combined sport director Anders Johnson said. “If that is really what other people were doing previously, I can’t believe that that’s how far people have taken it.”

    Winter O'lympics Innsbruck 1976: Toni Innauer   (Photo by RDB/ullstein bild via Getty Images)

    After Austria’s Toni Innauer won gold at the 1976 Olympics, the “Austrian effect” was born. (RDB/Getty Images)

    (ullstein bild Dtl. via Getty Images)

    ‘You name it, people have tried it’

    Cheating in ski jumping isn’t a new phenomenon. Athletes have been pushing boundaries and exploiting loopholes ever since the sport’s governing body began setting rules restricting how far they can fly.

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    In the mid-1970s, the Austrian national team unveiled suits that were highly permeable in the front but did not allow air to pass through in the back. The resulting parachute effect helped Austrian jumpers take gold and silver in the men’s large-hill event at the 1976 Winter Olympics. 17-year-old Austrian prodigy Toni Innauer set a world record the following month and then bettered it two days later.

    The success of those suits inspired copycat attempts, some well-executed, others not so much. Former American ski jumper Jeff Hastings recalls an early 1980s competitor who “put a garbage bag in the back of his suit to try to get the ‘76 Austrian effect.”

    “Everybody could hear him up there rustling like crazy,” Hastings said. “It wasn’t even effective but he was just trying to get a little advantage.”

    Detailed rules governing the air permeability of ski jumping suits soon went into effect, but that didn’t deter athletes eager to find even the slightest competitive advantage. Retired ski jumpers have admitted to coating the back of their suits with hairspray or slathering on wood glue in an effort to reduce air flow, improve lift and fly longer.

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    “You name it, people have tried it,” Spillane said.

    As the sport’s deep-pocketed superpowers stopped buying suits from third-party manufacturers and started hiring sophisticated specialists to produce them in-house, new opportunities to cheat have materialized over the past 10-15 years. Teams sought to gain an advantage by creating custom suits for athletes that exceeded their body measurement by as much as possible without resulting in a disqualification.

    The ideal place to add material is where the legs converge, according to Dr. John Goff, visiting physics professor at the University of Puget Sound and author of the book “Gold Medal Physics.” The crotch area of the suit is naturally stretched wide with a jumper’s legs in a “V” position during flight. It’s also close to the body’s center of gravity, helping an athlete gain lift without sacrificing control.

    “The crotch region, where the legs part, is kind of a sharp transition point,” Goff said. “If you can put some kind of material there to smooth that out, you can reduce the turbulence and increase the lift for the skier. That can have a pretty big influence on the flight.”

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    For FIS regulators seeking to prevent teams from gaining an advantage, the process starts with athletes stripping down to their underwear. Athletes must have their body dimensions measured before competitions in the presence of an FIS equipment controller, a team official and a qualified doctor or nurse.

    Since 2023, those measurements have sometimes been taken with the help of a 3D body scanner. Before then, it was always a manual process. As American Nordic Combined skier and 2018 Olympian Ben Berend once detailed in a blog post, that made the crotch measurement part of this process particularly awkward.

    “The process consists of standing with your feet 40 cm apart wearing nothing but underwear,” Berend wrote in 2016. “Then a metal rod is moved up as high as possible until it hits your junk. The measurement is essentially junk to floor in centimeters.”

    The intrusiveness doesn’t end once the measuring process is over. Athletes also must endure what FIS described in a 2023 memo as a “visual crotch area inspection.” A supervising doctor or nurse checks the athlete “for any irregularities in the genital area” — in other words an artificial prosthesis in the athlete’s underwear that could reduce the crotch-to-floor measurement.

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    As a result of stories like the ones shared by Kukkonen and Vermeulen, the process is fraught with suspicion that national teams are finding ways to bypass the rules.

    A friend recently sent Hastings a screenshot of one of the world’s top-ranked ski jumpers in mid-flight last year.

    “The crotch on his suit practically came down to his knees,” Hastings said. “I’m exaggerating a little bit, but it looked like he had a diaper on.”

    Between suspicious images like that one, unconfirmed gossip about which teams were cheating and the knowledge of how much difference a little extra fabric can make, Johnson admits it creates a toxic culture.

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    “If one team starts cheating, then two or three start doing it,” Johnson said. “Once you have the best nations in the world doing it, then everyone kind of has to follow suit. It just spreads like wildfire and then once it does, it’s really hard to get back.”

    SAPPORO, JAPAN - JANUARY 17: Marius Lindvik of Norway  competes during the FIS Men's Ski Jumping Sapporo Men's Individual Large Hill at Okurayama Jump Stadium on January 17, 2026 in Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan. (Photo by Kenta Harada/Getty Images)

    Marius Lindvik of Norway competes during the FIS Men’s Ski Jumping Sapporo Men’s Individual Large Hill at Okurayama Jump Stadium on January 17, 2026. (Photo by Kenta Harada/Getty Images)

    (Kenta Harada via Getty Images)

    ‘Doping, just with a different needle’

    The chicanery mostly occurred in secret until the anonymous whistleblower shined a spotlight on Norway’s dishonesty and turned the birthplace of ski jumping into a symbol for everything wrong with the sport. Austria, Slovenia and Poland filed formal protests against the Norwegians during the World Championships and called for their results to be annulled.

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    “This is doping, just with a different needle,” former German Olympic champion Jens Weissflog told the German newspaper Bild at the time.

    Lindvik and Forgang claimed ignorance, insisting they never would have jumped had they known their suits were rigged. When their coaches backed them, the Norwegian ski jumpers received suspensions of just three months, enabling them to return in time for the 2025-26 World Cup season and the Olympics, where the men’s competition begins Monday.

    The penalty was harsher for Livelten, Brevik and Norway assistant coach Thomas Lobben, each of whom confessed to being part of the conspiracy. On Jan. 15, an independent ethics panel backed the FIS’s request for a punishment strong enough to serve as a deterrent against future cheating, suspending the trio for 18 months apiece.

    “In [the panel’s] view, now is indeed the appropriate time to put down a clear marker to what is not acceptable,” the panel’s scathing ruling read.

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    For many in American ski jumping circles, the Norway cheating scandal entangled close friends. In 2022, USA Ski Jumping signed a formal partnership with the Norwegian national team for the current Olympic cycle to hold joint training camps and coaching clinics and to collaborate on sports science.

    While Johnson doesn’t condone what Norway did, he also bristles at how the Norwegians have become “the scapegoat for a much broader issue within our sport.”

    “There has been a lot of hypocrisy from other nations,” Johnson said. “I don’t have any personal beef with any of these teams, but it was incredibly disappointing for me to see the response from some of the nations. I think everyone needs to take a look at themselves in the mirror. No one can say they were fully clean. They can only claim they are because they didn’t get caught.”

    Embarrassed by the Norway scandal, FIS has since hired new equipment control coordinators and introduced sweeping reforms for the 2025-26 season. The changes include increased use of 3D scanners for pre-event body measurements, more precisely defined rules for how suits can be cut and shaped and more training for equipment controllers who oversee pre- and post-jump inspections.

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    Harsher sanctions can now be issued for rules violations during 3D measurement or for the manipulation of a suit after it has passed inspection. Athletes disqualified for an equipment violation during a competition will receive a yellow card. A further transgression will result in a red card and suspension from the following event.

    To Johnson and many others in the ski jumping community, the most notable change is one that has gone unmentioned in any FIS press release.

    In the past, Johnson found that “it was much easier for FIS to discard or disqualify athletes from smaller nations because they didn’t have that political pull in the sport.” This year, highly ranked jumpers from prominent nations have been cited for equipment violations, athletes like Slovenia’s Timi Zajc, who was tied for second place at an event in Germany earlier this winter when he was disqualified for suit violation.

    “This year, it doesn’t seem to matter if you’re from Austria or Slovenia or Poland or the United States,” Johnson said. “They’re enforcing the rules for everyone.”

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    As the world’s top ski jumpers prepare to showcase their talents on the Olympic stage this month, the obvious question is whether the competition will be fair. Will the threat of stricter rules and tougher punishments be enough to deter cheaters? Or will the pursuit of Olympic glory tempt some countries to try to skirt the rules?

    “Going into this Olympics, I have a lot more faith and trust in the system,” Johnson said, “but I still have my reservations that teams are really going to be in compliance, that they’re not going to be trying something new.”

  • Nuggets’ Peyton Watson reportedly sidelined with left hamstring strain

    Amid a three-game losing streak, the Denver Nuggets have lost their fourth-leading scorer with a hamstring injury.

    Peyton Watson suffered a Grade 2 left hamstring strain late in Wednesday’s 134-127 double-overtime loss to the New York Knicks and is expected to be sideline for an extended period of time, The Athletic’s Tony Jones reports.

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    Watson, 23, was having a breakout season for the Nuggets, averaging 14.9 points, 4.9 rebounds and 2 assists per game. He was also shooting 42% on 180 3-point attempts.

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    The news on the fourth-year guard adds to the Nuggets’ injury woes. Aaron Gordon will be sidelined for at least four to six weeks after reaggravating a strained right hamstring that has limited him to 20 games this season. Watson had replaced Gordon in the starting lineup and was averaging 21.4 points since the beginning of January.

    In addition to Gordon and Watson, MVP runner-up Nikola Jokić missed 17 games with a bone bruise in his left knee. Christian Braun has appeared in only 16 games due to an ankle injury. And Jonas Valanciunas missed nearly a month with a calf strain.

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    “It’s deflating when you keep seeing people go down around you when you’re trying to build towards something,” Nuggets coach David Adelman told ESPN’s Tim Bontemps following Wednesday’s game.

    [Get more Nuggets news: Denver team feed]

    Despite the injuries and losing six of its past 10 games, Denver currently holds the No. 3 spot in the Western Conference with a 33-19 record going into Saturday’s road matchup with the Chicago Bulls.

    The Nuggets did not make any additions before Thursday’s NBA trade deadline, but did send Hunter Tyson and a 2032 second-round pick to the Brooklyn Nets. In exchange, Denver receives the less favorable of a 2026 second-rounder from either the Los Angeles Clippers or Atlanta Hawks. The team also converted Spencer Jones’ contract from a two-way deal to a standard league contract.

  • Charles Woodson reportedly foregoes ownership stake in Browns to keep spirits companies

    Pro Football Hall of Famer Charles Woodson was announced to have purchased a 0.1% stake in the Cleveland Browns last May. There appears to be a hitch in that deal.

    The former defensive back told Front Office Sports that he has opted to forego his minority stake in the Browns in order to keep his name connected to the branding of his spirits companies. From FOS:

    “I thought I was going to be a proud owner of the Browns but it wasn’t able to happen because I wasn’t able to take my name off of my product,” Woodson said. “It’s what made the product. It’s how I started so I wasn’t able to do that.”

    The deal had progressed enough that the Browns announced in May that Woodson had received league approval while speaking glowingly of the insight he will provide in the team owner’s box. With the franchise valued at $6.4 billion last summer, we are talking about a stake worth approximately $6 million.

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    However, FOS notes that league rules prohibit club owners from advertising alcohol, which clashes with Woodson's "Charles Woodson's Intercept Wines" and "Woodson Whiskey" labels. Funnily enough, that wine brand has been served at Las Vegas Raiders games in the past.

    Woodson ultimately opted to keep the brands rather than join the Browns, who released a short statement to FOS:

    “We respect the decision by Charles and wish him well.”

    Woodson never played for the Browns in his career, but he's an Ohio native who reportedly hit it off with Browns owner Jimmy Haslam in 2024. With no NFL team to help manage, Woodson will continue his post-retirement life as an NFL broadcaster and aspiring alcohol mogul.

  • World Baseball Classic 2026: Tigers’ Javier Báez ineligible to play for Puerto Rico due to positive marijuana test

    Detroit Tigers All-Star Javier Báez has been ruled ineligible to play for Puerto Rico in the 2026 World Baseball Classic after testing positive for marijuana during the 2023 tournament, The Athletic’s Cody Stavenhagen reports.

    Under World Baseball Softball Confederation rules, anyone testing positive for marijuana in its events is ineligible for two years. Báez tested positive in 2023, which made him ineligible to play in WBSC events from April 26, 2024, to April 26, 2026. The 2026 WBC, to be played March 5-17, takes place during that period.

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    Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association have been working in tandem to restore Báez’s eligibility for the 2026 tournament. But the WBSC isn’t willing to make an exception on its drug policy, according to Stavenhagen.

    Báez being ruled ineligible is another setback for Puerto Rico, which has had difficulty assembling a roster for the 2026 WBC due to multiple players being denied insurance coverage because of previous injuries.

    New York Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor had coverage denied due to two surgeries on his right elbow over the past three years. Others unable to get insurance for the tournament include Houston Astros third baseman Carlos Correa, who was left off Puerto Rico’s WBC roster, which was announced Thursday.

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    With so many players unavailable, Puerto Rico reportedly considered withdrawing from the WBC.

    Báez’s positive marijuana test will not result in any penalty from MLB. The league has allowed marijuana use since 2020.

    The 12-year MLB veteran, 33, had a resurgent season for the Tigers in 2025, playing shortstop and center field. He was named a starter for the American League All-Star team and finished with a .257/.282/.398 slash line, 17 doubles, 12 home runs and 57 RBI.

    Báez played for Puerto Rico in the 2017 and 2023 editions of the WBC. He has a Puerto Rican flag tattooed on one of his arms.