Author: rb809rb

  • Sam Darnold, Take 2: Seahawks’ chance at No. 1 seed gives QB a rare chance to rewrite story

    Entering the regular-season finale a year ago, Sam Darnold was complicating the Minnesota Vikings’ grand quarterback plan.

    The franchise that had drafted then-rookie J.J. McCarthy 10th overall and signed Darnold with the expectation he would be their bridge or backup quarterback. A season-ending injury to McCarthy in training camp gave Darnold the keys to start instead.

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    And 16 games in, Darnold had ratcheted up the speedometer. His 68.1% completion percentage, 35 touchdowns and 106.4 passer rating were on track for career bests. His 14 wins doubled his previous single-season high. The win threshold also doubled the Vikings’ total from a year earlier.

    So team had to extend quarterback, right? How could the Vikings let walk the Pro Bowl player who had helped them clinch a playoff spot and set them up for a regular-season finale that dangled the prize of the NFC’s top playoff seed and a first-round bye?

    [Get more Seahawks news: Seattle team feed]

    Two losses later, the Vikings parted ways. A touchdown-less Darnold performance in a 31-9 loss to the Detroit Lions and a nine-sack, 27-9 wild-card loss to the Los Angeles Rams were sufficient for Minnesota to opt for its rookie’s contract rather than Darnold’s price point.

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    The Seahawks pounced. And now, quarterbacking the Seahawks to 13-3 entering Week 18, Darnold finds himself in the exact same position.

    With Seattle’s 27-10 win over the Carolina Panthers on Sunday, Darnold is yet again preparing for a win-and-you’re-No. 1 game in Week 18. This time, his Seahawks will face the San Francisco 49ers, who also have a shot at the No. 1 seed after beating the Chicago Bears on Sunday Night Football.

    Teammates know what Darnold is doing is not normal.

    “I’ve never been in this position before,” seventh-year safety Julian Love said. “You got to kind of love it. You got to just approach this next week… with just gratitude of like, ‘Man, we’re in a position to really punch our ticket in a great way.’ And so yeah, I just think the whole team is fired up.

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    “I haven’t had too many of these moments in my career, and so I’m ready to just take it.”

    CHARLOTTE, NC - DECEMBER 28: Seattle Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold (14) throws a pass during an NFL football game between the Seattle Seahawks and the Carolina Panthers on December 28, 2025 at Bank of America stadium in Charlotte, N.C. (Photo by John Byrum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    Seahawks quarterback Sam Darnold has another shot at helping his team clinch the No. 1 seed in the NFC playoffs. (Photo by John Byrum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    In the last two seasons, Darnold has rewritten his narrative to the tune of consecutive Pro Bowl berths after six years in search of his footing. He is the only quarterback to win at least 12 games with different teams in consecutive seasons, per Next Gen Stats (Tom Brady held the previous record, at 11).

    And Sunday, he bumped the record he already held to 13.

    So as the Seahawks face the 49ers next weekend, Darnold’s next chance to step beyond last year’s success awaits. He won’t need to carry the bid for win No. 14 himself.

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    “It takes 100% of everybody all the time, every week,” Seahawks head coach Mike Macdonald said. “So nothing changes this week. But one of our goals is to win the division, and it’s going to come down to, if we win the game, win the division.

    “So we’ll hit the next goal.”

    For Seahawks and Darnold, ‘complementary football all season long’

    Against a Carolina defense that had upset the Rams and intercepted 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy three times earlier this season, Darnold’s game was rocky.

    He completed 66.7% (18 of 27) of his pass attempts for 147 yards, one touchdown and one interception.

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    The Seahawks’ offense did not find its footing until halfway through the third quarter.

    An intentional grounding penalty killed one first-quarter drive while a sack for a loss of 10 yards set up third-and-15 to threaten another. On third-and-5 with 5:33 to play in the second quarter, Panthers linebacker Nick Scourton hit Darnold’s arm, and defensive tackle A’Shawn Robinson then swatted and recovered a fumble. Darnold tackled Robinson to jar the ball loose, but Panthers inside linebacker Christian Rozeboom recovered. The Panthers scored three points off the turnover. After a Seattle turnover on downs, the score was tied at half.

    “I dropped the ball,” Darnold said of the fumble. “I feel like I was still in the pocket so I had a good base to make that throw. The defense just made a good play. Got their hand on my forearm or elbow, and it kind of is what it is …

    “As a quarterback, I don’t want to be making tackles out there. But it was kind of a throwback there to high school when I was playing linebacker.”

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    As a quarterback, Darnold also doesn’t want to be throwing interceptions. But less than three minutes into the third quarter, he chanced an end-zone ball to Jaxon Smith-Njigba that Carolina cornerback Mike Jackson picked.

    The Seahawks avoided major damage when DeMarcus Lawrence forced a fumble the next play. At that point, the momentum would be Seattle’s to stay.

    “I’ve just got to move on in my progression,” Darnold said. “Or at least make it an us-or-nobody throw where Jaxson can go up, and get it or it’s incomplete. So our defense has had our back all year and vice versa. When we feel like we need a spark, our offense has stepped up in big ways as well.

    “It’s complementary football all season long and this one especially.”

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    Complementary football meant that key plays in key times from the offense were enough to send a stellar defensive performance and solid special teams day over the hump.

    After recent work on third-and-longer plays, per Darnold, the Seahawks converted four third downs of 9+ yards. Their 56.3% third-down conversion rate (9 of 16) whomped the Panthers’ 9.1% (1 of 11) to keep drives alive. And in the third quarter, the Seahawks boat-raced the Panthers to the tune of two takeaways and two touchdowns.

    By the time Carolina found the end zone for the first time in the fourth quarter, Seattle’s cushion was strong. And unlike earlier-season drives in four-minute scenarios, the Seahawks ran in another touchdown to put the game out of reach.

    “Credit to them, they made adjustments,” Panthers quarterback Bryce Young said after throwing for just 54 yards and an interception to pair with 27 rushing yards and a ground score. “They came out with a game plan, did a better job of executing than we did.

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    “You’re going to go up against different schemes. People are going to make adjustments. And we didn’t do a good enough job of being able to react to that and encounter it.

    “But that’s the NFL.”

    After win ‘wasn’t Sam’s best game,’ will Darnold do enough for Seahawks to secure bye?

    In the season opener against the 49ers, Darnold threw for just 150 yards and no scores as the Seahawks lost, 17-13. In their season finale, they arrive with a different reputation.

    The Seahawks’ defense has shown that in Macdonald’s second year coordinating, they’re much readier to navigate the complex schemes of a coach who at least one former colleague calls “the Sean McVay of defense.” Smith-Njigba has blown past his 1,130 yards and six touchdowns last season to the tune of a league-best 1,709 receiving yards and 10 touchdowns.

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    The Seahawks rank second in scoring offense and defense; seventh in offensive yards and sixth in yards allowed.

    They’re talented across levels. And yet, whether Darnold can carry his team is unclear.

    Sure, it was Darnold throwing on the run while needling an 18-yard completion to Smith-Njigba on the sideline in the fourth quarter Sunday. And it was Darnold who found tight end A.J. Barner for 16- and 17-yard completions in the third quarter, including a touchdown.

    But it was also primarily because of Darnold that, as Macdonald worried, the Seahawks watched “the ball being in jeopardy.” A defense that forced Carolina into checkdowns and 163 yards from Seattle’s running game overcame Darnold’s late start.

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    “I know it wasn’t Sam’s best game of all time and the stats reflect that, but there’s some big-time third-down throws with pressure in his face,” Macdonald said. “We threw one to Jax, that route to Cooper [Kupp]. I mean, those are some big-time throws in the face of pressure that we need to be able to make and they’re not easy to make.”

    Defensive teammates said they’ll keep doing their part.

    “Offense make a mistake, defense helps,” Lawrence said. “Defense make a mistake, offense is right there to have our back.

    “Just the dynamic of taking care of each other. Fighting for each other.”

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    And next weekend, they’ll fight for the No. 1 seed.

    The implications for Darnold’s narrative will be there. The unlikely chance to redo his NFL playoff narrative in such similar circumstances so quickly awaits.

    Darnold, like his head coach, will downplay it.

    “It’s just the next game,” Darnold said. “Obviously it’s a big game, but we’re excited about that opportunity. We’re going to enjoy this one a little bit and then get focused on it tomorrow.”

  • Bears vs. 49ers: San Francisco outlasts Chicago in high-stakes thriller to keep No. 1 seed hopes afloat

    Maybe Brock Purdy and the San Francisco 49ers can outscore everyone on the way to the Super Bowl.

    The 49ers are scoring at will lately. Purdy is playing as well as any quarterback in the NFL. Niners head coach Kyle Shanahan is the hottest play-caller in the league. The defense … well, the defense might be a problem in the playoffs, but San Francisco’s offense looks unstoppable.

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    The 49ers gave up 38 points Sunday night and still won a wildly entertaining and crucial game against the Chicago Bears. Purdy accounted for five touchdowns, including a 38-yard score to Jauan Jennings with 2:15 remaining to give the 49ers the lead.

    Caleb Williams, who had a big game, drove the Bears downfield and had the Bears on the 2-yard line with four seconds to go. The 49ers forced an incompletion on the final play to hang on to a 42-38 win.

    The 49ers will host the Seattle Seahawks on Saturday night with the NFC West and the No. 1 seed in the NFC on the line.

    The highlight of the night for Purdy came in the third quarter, when he avoided the pass rush as he rolled left, split two defensive linemen to step up and tossed it to Kyle Juszczyk for the touchdown. Purdy has been on fire the past few weeks and he was fantastic Sunday night. The 49ers didn’t have tight end George Kittle, who was out with injury, and they lost offensive tackle Trent Williams on the first play of the game with a hamstring injury. It didn’t matter because Purdy and Christian McCaffrey, who had 181 total yards, were dominant.

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    With the win, the 49ers set up a huge home game for Week 18. Since Super Bowl LX will be in Santa Clara, a win next weekend means the 49ers will not play another road game this season.

    Scoring explosion in first half for both teams

    The first half was one of the most eventful of the season.

    It started with Bears linebacker T.J. Edwards picking off Purdy on the first play of the game and returning it 34 yards for a touchdown. Unfortunately for Chicago, that was one of the few things its defense did right in the first half.

    Purdy had a passing touchdown and a rushing touchdown by the end of the first quarter. Williams had a 35-yard touchdown pass to Luther Burden III in the first quarter. It was the first NFL game this season in which both teams scored two touchdowns in the first quarter, NBC said on its broadcast.

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    Neither offense was done. Williams had a 36-yard touchdown pass to Colston Loveland. McCaffrey scored on a touchdown run, and then Purdy had another rushing touchdown. There were 49 points in the first half alone.

    Last week, the 49ers scored on seven of their first eight drives against the Indianapolis Colts, and the other drive was a missed field goal. The game before that against Tennessee, San Francisco scored on seven of eight drives, with a fumble ruining a shot at a perfect game. The Bears did force one punt in the first half, and it was San Francisco’s first punt since Nov. 30. Their offense has been on a tear, and it continued against Chicago.

    Bears, 49ers make NFL history

    The points kept coming in the second half. The game was tied 7-7, 14-14, 21-21, 28-28 and 35-35. It’s the first time in NFL history that has happened. Both offenses were putting on a great show, but both defenses looked like a potential roadblock to making a playoff run.

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    The 49ers finally got stopped in the second half. They had a fourth-and-7 on the Bears’ 43-yard line in a tie game. Shanahan could have gone for it, but he punted. The trust in his defense was misplaced. The Bears drove downfield, but the 49ers held the Bears to a field goal. Chicago led 38-35 with 5:22 left.

    The way the 49ers’ offense had moved the ball most of the night, getting at least a field goal to tie the game seemed inevitable. Purdy hit Jennings on a crossing route and Jennings took it the rest of the way for a 38-yard score. It was Purdy’s fifth touchdown of the night, with three passing and two rushing. The only problem seemed to be that the 49ers’ defense had to hold for 2:15 to win the game.

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    The Bears got into 49ers territory with more than a minute to play. Williams hit Burden for a huge 14-yard gain on third-and-10 to keep the drive going. The Bears then faced a fourth-and-5 with 33 seconds left and Williams hit Loveland for the first down. A hook-and-ladder play got the Bears to the 2-yard line, giving them just one more play after spiking the ball. Williams couldn’t find anyone open as he scrambled around and threw incomplete into the end zone.

    The 49ers know their defense will have to get some stops to win a championship. But their offense is no question at all.

    Live coverage is over43 updates
    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      The winner of this contest on Saturday night will not only claim the NFC West title, but will also get the No. 1 seed in the conference and the bye in the first round of the playoffs.

      Seattle Seahawks at San Francisco 49ers

      Time: 8 p.m.
      Location: Levi’s Stadium | Santa Clara, California
      TV: ABC/ESPN

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      After recording a team-high 138 yards and a touchdown on eight catches, Luther Burden is now being carted off the field. He went down on that final play.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      The path to the No. 1 seed in the NFC is firmly in San Francisco’s control. If the 49ers beat the Seahawks next week, the bye is theirs.

      The Bears, however, can no longer claim the top seed.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      San Francisco came up with one last stop, and this incredible “Sunday Night Football” matchup is theirs.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      Caleb Williams came so close there after scrambling up the left side, but Walker couldn’t quite make the grab. San Francisco has pulled off a wild win.

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      Ryan Young

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      Ryan Young

      The Bears have converted the first down after Williams found a wide open Loveland in the middle of the field. They’ve got 26 seconds left to get into the end zone.

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      Ryan Young

      Caleb Williams couldn’t get it to Luther Burden there on the sidelines, so the Bears are looking at a fourth down with 33 seconds left. Here we go…

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      Ryan Young

      The Bears are driving and slowly getting into scoring position…

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      The Bears will have all three of their timeouts, and the two minute warning, when they get the ball back. But a field goal won’t cut it.

      Let’s see if Caleb Williams can pull off another game winning drive…

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      Brock Purdy just found Jauan Jennings cutting across the middle of the field there, and he broke all the way down 38 yards to the end zone.

      The 49ers are up 42-38 now with 2:15 to go.

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      Ryan Young

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      Ryan Young

      For the first time tonight, we have a field goal.

      The Bears got all the way inside the 10 yard line — thanks to a huge 32-yard gain from Loveland — but their drive stalled out. The 49ers nearly intercepted Caleb Williams there on third down, too.

      So Cairo Santos came out to hit a 29-yard field goal, and the Bears are up 38-35 with 5:22 left in the game.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      This scoring run has finally been broken up. The Bears got to Brock Purdy there and forced an awkward missed throw on third down, so the 49ers have to punt for the second time tonight.

      The Bears will take over from their own 11 now with 11:23 left in the game.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      This stat from the NBC broadcast sums up the game perfectly. For the first time in a regular season NFL game, we’ve been tied at 7, 14, 21, 28 and 35 tonight.

      That’s only happened one other time in NFL history, in a playoff game back in 2013 between the Ravens and Broncos.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      D’Andre Swift broke through the line and pulled off a 22-yard run to tie this game up on the first play of the fourth quarter. That’s his second touchdown of the night, and we’re tied up once again.

      This game is not slowing down…

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      The Bears could have attempted a field goal there on fourth down, but they opted to go for it from five yards out and pulled it off. They’re in scoring position once again when we come back.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      Brock Purdy somehow managed to avoid the sack there, and then stepped up to find an open Kyle Juszczyk in the end zone! Naturally, Purdy started dancing immediately.

      San Francisco is in the lead again, 35-28, with 4:52 left in the third quarter.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      And we’ve picked up right where we left off. D’Andre Swift capped a 10-play drive with a 2-yard touchdown run to open the third quarter, and this game is tied once again.

  • Teary-eyed Philip Rivers says he’d ‘do it all again’ with Colts following his expected last start: ‘It’s been an absolute blast’

    The Indianapolis Colts didn’t win any of his starts. But Philip Rivers gave them a chance in one of the more remarkable stories of this or any other NFL season.

    And after what’s expected to be his last NFL game — a 23-17 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday — Rivers said that he’d do it all again, even knowing that he wouldn’t win in his brief, unprecedented NFL comeback.

    “If this was the last one, shoot, I told you guys I wouldn’t have any regrets about coming back,” Rivers said. “And I don’t.

    “Other than us not winning, it’s been an absolute blast for three weeks. If I go back and say, ‘All right, you know everything that’s gonna happen, what are you gonna do?’ I’d do it all again. It’s been absolutely awesome.”

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    ‘I couldn’t be more thankful’

    Rivers then started to fight back tears and spoke about what he and everyone around him previously thought was his last NFL game with the Colts in the playoffs after the 2020 season.

    “If it’s the last one, it’s the last one,” Rivers continued. “I thought the last one was walking off the field in Buffalo, walking up that tunnel. And I was fine with that.

    “That one, I had tears those few days after it. And I was at peace with that being the last one. So certainly if it is, I got three bonus games that I never saw coming and couldn’t be more thankful that I got the opportunity.”

    The Colts haven’t been to the playoffs since Rivers played in that wild-card loss to the Bills in January 2021. So when Daniel Jones ruptured his Achilles, leaving the Colts desperate at quarterback in the thick of a playoff race, the team gave him a call.

    Few were able to predict what came next. Not only did Rivers answer the call at 44 years old. But he suited up to play in an NFL game days later having not played in the league in nearly five years. And when he took the field, he was a capable starting NFL quarterback. At his best in his three games, he was more than that.

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    The Colts limited the playbook in Rivers’ first game back, and his arm strength was noticeably sapped as Indianapolis largely kept the offense to Jonathan Taylor runs and short passes. But Rivers made the most of the opportunity and led the Colts to a late fourth-quarter lead against a Seahawks team that might be the No. 1 seed in the NFC playoffs before Seattle rallied for the 16-14 win.

    The limitations were off for Rivers’ second game, and he led the Colts to touchdowns on their first two drives before the San Francisco 49ers overwhelmed the Indianapolis defense in a 47-28 Week 16 win.

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    Then on Sunday, Rivers threw a third-quarter touchdown to give the Colts a 17-14 lead before the Jacksonville Jaguars pulled away for a 23-17 win.

    The Colts have been eliminated from the playoffs, and NFL Network reported Sunday that the Jaguars game was likely to be Rivers’ last. Rookie Riley Leonard is expected to start in Week 18 against the Houston Texans, according to the report.

    Rivers’ final 2025 tally

    If it was his last game, Rivers will finish his 2025 season having completed 63% of his passes for 5.9 yards per attempt and 181.3 yards per game with 4 touchdowns and 3 interceptions. He did so against three teams that are going to the playoffs.

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    The Colts didn’t win. And his arm isn’t what it used to be. But it was pretty good for a 44-year-old coming off the couch.

    That Rivers was able to suit up for the 53-man roster on game days in his position was remarkable. That he was able to start on days’ notice and do so as a competent NFL quarterback is astounding.

    The NFL’s never seen it before. And it very well may never again.

    Philip Rivers runs off the field after what's likely his last NFL start.

    Philip Rivers runs off the field after what’s likely his last NFL start.

    (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

  • Week 17 Instant Reactions: Fantasy football championships jolted by 49ers-Bears game-of-the-year candidate

    49ers-Bears SNF matchup is the stuff fantasy football dreams are made of

    Both teams dropped 14 in the first quarter; from that point, you could feel a track meet coming. It was quarterback cinema. Brock Purdy and Caleb Williams traded blows all night with clean pockets, downfield shots and just one sack between them. Purdy ended with 24/33 for 303 with 3 passing touchdowns and 2 more on the ground. Caleb answered with 25/42 for 330 and 2 scores.

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    That’s how you close Championship Week.

    Let’s start with the winner. Purdy’s first snap was a disaster — tipped ball, pick six — then he answered immediately, hitting Jake Tonges for a 1-yard score on the next series, then rushed for back-to-back touchdowns on the next few possessions. From there, he looked in command — a quarterback who has settled into this offense, settled into his spot and played comfortable football. The George Kittle question hovered all week and Kyle Shanahan went next man up. Tonges balled out with 7 grabs for 60 yards and a team-high 9 targets. Ricky Pearsall delivered too. When Ricky Pearsall plays, Ricky Pearsall is good — nasty routes, smart spots and a 5 for 85 finish here. Jauan Jennings added a touchdown that gave Purdy his fifth of the night.

    Two weeks in a row, Purdy has posted 5 touchdowns. That’s 10 TDs in two weeks. What a star through your fantasy playoffs.

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    And then there was the 49ers’ engine.

    Christian McCaffrey detonated. Twenty-three carries, 140 yards and a touchdown with a long of 41. It felt good to see CMC get loose like that again. He looked like himself — fast through the crease, finishing runs, breaking tackles, making defenders miss in space. No hint of slowdown. He got the volume and he was great.

    That’s your fantasy MVP.

    On the Bears side, Caleb Williams reminded everyone he’s a dynamic playmaker worthy of being the No. 1 overall pick from 2024. All night, Caleb was converting fourth downs, ripping off-platform throws, keeping pressure on the secondary snap after snap. His receivers were balling. Luther Burden III put together a next-year “you’re going to draft me high” highlight reel with 8 for 138 and a touchdown. It was a glimpse that showed just how dangerous he can be when he’s a priority in the offense.

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    Colston Loveland looked like a future star, a massive wideout in a tight end’s body, going 6 for 94 and a score while leading the team in targets. D’Andre Swift punched in two touchdowns and added 54 rushing yards with 25 receiving. Kyle Monangai wasn’t fantasy relevant, but he played well.

    If you trusted DJ Moore in the final, you got a rough beat. One catch for 7 yards on a night where points flooded the screen is hard to swallow. The talent is obvious, yet the usage drifted again. That’s going to be a talking point all offseason.

    Big picture for fantasy, this was the full menu. Purdy wasn’t a system quarterback tonight. He was THE system. Tonges and Pearsall were clutch streamers if you had to dig. McCaffrey did MVP things. On the other side, Williams showed why his ceiling forces you to keep the light on “go” every week, Burden looked like a set-and-forget option for Year 2, and Loveland announced himself as a tight end you will draft much higher next summer.

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    Instant Reaction: This was the game of the year. Fantasy points were abundant and the stars delivered when it mattered.

    Drake Maye turns Week 17 into Maye Day

    The Patriots blasted the Jets, 42-10, and it was never a game. Drake Maye was flawless. Maye’s arm was on full display, going 19/21 for 256 with 12.2 YPA, five TDs and one sack. Just two incompletions in a fantasy-title week. He fed his guys and threw touchdowns to Stefon Diggs, Rhamondre Stevenson, Hunter Henry, Austin Hooper and Efton Chism III. The passing game was on point snap after snap, from start to finish.

    Stevenson was a monster. He checked in as the RB4 heading into Monday night with 8/47/1 rushing and 5/55/1 receiving, ripping chunk gains and cashing scoring chances even while TreVeyon Henderson handled 19 carries for 82. This was as efficient as we’ve seen him all year and exactly what you needed in Championship Week if you took the chance to start him.

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    On the other side, the Jets started Brady Cook, and outside of Breece Hall crossing 1,000 yards on the season with a 111-yard day, the offense had nothing. This was all New England from the opening drive. Maye is the QB1 for Week 17 heading into Monday night and he looked like the MVP from start to finish.

    There’s no next week for most leagues, but there is next draft. With the way he processed, attacked and distributed today, Maye should land in QB2 or QB3 range for 2026 fantasy drafts. Give the Patriots another offseason to add more speed and size on offense and he’s a player you build around.

    Instant reaction: Drake Maye will be in the elite quarterback tier for 2026 drafts.

    Josh Allen turns a 12-point slog into QB4 with two goal-line hammers

    This didn’t look like a ceiling spot. Buffalo scored 12 total points, and for most of the afternoon, it felt like another rough one after last week’s dud. But it’s Josh Allen. He muscled Buffalo’s offense to fantasy pay dirt with two goal-line rushing TDs and 27 rushing yards, salvaging a day that had every sign of disappointment. He finished 23/35 for 262 with no TDs, no INTs and took five sacks against a defense that squeezed everything underneath. It wasn’t pretty; it was effective, and it lands him as QB4 heading into Monday night.

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    That was the Allen experience in Championship Week — when the throwing lane tightened, he became the short-yardage back and the red-zone fixer. Buffalo wasn’t good on third down and explosive plays were rare, yet when it needed a drive, Allen found just enough through the air and then finished it himself.

    One wild note from this slate: three quarterbacks sit top five without a passing TD — Jaxson Dart, Trevor Lawrence and Allen — a reminder of how valuable rushing is at the position.

    Big picture, nothing changes for next draft season. Allen will again be at or near the top of the quarterback board in 2026 because the weekly floor and multi-TD rushing upside are unmatched.

    Instant reaction: Josh Allen is HIM even when he’s not great.

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    Ja’Marr Chase and Chase Brown closed Championship Week like title winners

    Cincinnati handled its business in a 37-14 win over the Cardinals and the offense felt in rhythm from the jump. Joe Burrow was patient, then decisive, stacking easy completions before uncorking when Arizona bailed. Ja’Marr Chase finally snapped the drought and did it in the money week — 7 for 60 with two touchdowns — working the red zone and the middle where he wins. Chase Brown brought juice all afternoon from the backfield. He logged 22 carries for 101 and two scores and added three for 40 as a receiver, giving the Bengals balance and explosives when they needed them. Tee Higgins didn’t bury your lineup, but this was about the Chase duo with Burrow steering a comfortable win.

    Looking ahead, Chase will head into next season as one of the top wide receivers in fantasy football. Burrow returns to that top quarterback tier because when he’s upright, the operation hums just like this.

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    The interesting piece is Brown.

    For the second straight year, he finished the season like a problem for defenses, and while Samaje Perine mixed in, when Cincinnati needed to close, it was Brown on the field. If the Bengals’ offseason signals he’s the lead back, he profiles as a sneaky mid-round pick who can cash big in 2026 drafts.

    Instant reaction: Chase Brown should be in the top-10 RB conversation in 2026 drafts.

    Trey McBride sets TE catches record, Michael Wilson shows out when it counts

    This game was billed as a shootout and the total did hit 51, but Arizona didn’t carry its end in the loss to Cincy. Two guys still answered for fantasy. Trey McBride shook off last week’s worst game of his season and went 10 for 76 with a late TD on 13 targets, becoming the NFL’s single-season receptions leader for a tight end at 119 with one to play. TE1 heading into Monday night and he earned it.

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    Michael Wilson was the featured receiver even with Marvin Harrison Jr. active. Wilson posted five for 89 and a TD on 10 targets and it could’ve been bigger. Wilson’s emergence has been one of the better late-season turns for Arizona and it puts real pressure on how the team builds this passing game for the future.

    Looking ahead, McBride should be the top tight end off the board next season. Volume, red-zone trust and week-winning upside put him over Brock Bowers for me.

    Wilson has established himself as a real fantasy weapon and I would not be shocked if he comes off the board ahead of Marvin Harrison Jr. in 2026 drafts, quarterback situation pending.

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    Instant reaction: Trey McBride and Michael Wilson delivered for managers in Week 17.

    A lot to be excited about in New Orleans; Chris Olave torches Championship Week

    Chris Olave showed up like a true alpha when it mattered most. On 11 targets, he went 8/119/1, making it three straight games with a touchdown and back-to-back 100-yard outings. He’s been quietly consistent all season, then ramped it up for the playoffs, flat-out carrying teams through December. The Saints beat the Titans, 34-26, and this Kellen Moore offense kept feeding its best player.

    Rookie quarterback Tyler Shough continued to get better. He’s sitting as the QB7 heading into Monday night and Olave answered every time they dialed his number.

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    New Orleans has won five of its last seven to get to 6-10 with a chance to finish strong on the road at Atlanta, and the arrow on this passing game is pointing up. Shough’s development should have us feeling even better about Olave’s outlook next year. He’s in line for a big extension and he’s already one of the league’s better receivers. If this offense keeps building around him, he profiles as a top-five fantasy wideout for 2026 drafts. In half-PPR he’s the WR1 for Week 17 right now, which fits the dominance we just watched.

    Instant reaction: Chris Olave belongs in the top-10 conversation at wide receiver for 2026 drafts.

    Derrick Henry in December is inevitable

    Derrick Henry carried people to fantasy championships and carried Baltimore to a 41-24 win at Lambeau. The Ravens needed every ounce of him with Lamar Jackson out and the coaching staff under fire after last week’s fourth-quarter freeze. The response was vintage. A career-high 36 carries, 216 yards and four touchdowns, with a long of 30.

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    He was physical at the line, violent in the second level and you could see Green Bay wanted no part of those stiff arms by the third quarter. When Baltimore needed a first down to ice it, Henry didn’t just move the chains — he ripped off a house call for No. 4 to slam the door.

    This is why the King is the King. We can say it’s been a down year by his standard, yet he’s still pacing for 1,500-plus and 16 touchdowns. The tape says the burst is there. The role is undeniable when the game is in the balance. Whatever age discount we get next draft season, I’ll gladly take it in 2026. Give me the volume, the goal-line work and the ability to stack 25-plus touches in December when leagues are decided.

    Instant reaction: Derrick Henry will be one of the best value running backs of 2026 drafts.

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    Trevor Lawrence doesn’t hit QB1, still delivers with 2 rushing TDs to bury Indy

    I called QB1 for Trevor Lawrence this week, and while that didn’t hit, I’ll take QB5 heading into Monday night. It was still a championship performance. Jacksonville beat the Colts, 23-17, and Lawrence answered every time it mattered with his legs, punching in two rushing scores. That makes three straight games with a rushing touchdown, exactly the kind of late-season heater you needed in the playoffs. Indy threw a real punch at home, but Lawrence had the answers.

    Travis Etienne Jr. had a solid day on the ground with 17 for 76. Parker Washington led the room with eight for 115, and Jakobi Meyers hauled in six catches. Brenton Strange and Brian Thomas Jr. were involved but didn’t have big days. Bottom line, Lawrence controlled the game flow and closed in the red zone, which is why he still lands in that top-five mix for the week.

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    Stock up across the board in Jacksonville. As Lawrence plays better, everyone rises. There’s no next week, but there is next draft, and I’m very curious to see how a talent like Travis Hunter could fit into this attack next season if he’s healthy. Add one more dynamic weapon and this passing game gets scary.

    Instant reaction: Trevor Lawrence proved he belongs in that top-tier quarterback mix for 2026 drafts.

    Jaxson Dart makes Championship Week about winning, not the No. 1 pick

    This was supposed to be a race to the bottom. The Giants didn’t care. They smacked the Raiders, 34-10, behind rookie Jaxson Dart, who played through missing pieces up front and still went full bulldozer in the red zone. He heads into Monday night sitting as the QB3 after ripping off nine carries for 48 yards and two touchdowns, running with attitude and finishing through contact. Concussions be damned, the kid refused to tap out and New York followed his lead.

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    Dart kept it efficient and got his guy rolling. Wan’Dale Robinson turned 14 targets into 11 for 113 and was a chain mover all afternoon. Tyrone Tracy Jr. and Devin Singletary handled the backfield grind and Dart did the rest with timely scrambles and keepers near the goal line. For a game billed as draft-order theater, the rookie turned it into a statement that he’s the future.

    Looking to next season, Dart’s rushing is a cheat code. He’s been a top-10 quarterback most weeks he’s started and Year 2 sets up for another leap if the Giants nail the coaching staff. His dual-threat profile makes him a high upside weekly starter with top-five upside in 2026 drafts.

    Instant reaction: Jaxson Dart looks like a Year 2 star who could end up top-five in 2026.

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    Zach Charbonnet put Seattle on his back in Championship Week

    If you rolled with Zach Charbonnet in your starting lineup, congrats — you got exactly what you needed — and then some. Charbonnet hammered Carolina for 18 carries, 110 yards and two touchdowns, then tacked on two catches for 12. Explosive runs, short-yardage power — all of it. Seattle didn’t need much through the air with the way this one unfolded. Sam Darnold struggled and still, it didn’t matter, because Charbonnet was the best player on the field. The Seahawks won 27-10 and controlled it wire to wire while Carolina’s offense sputtered to 40 net passing yards.

    Bryce Young couldn’t get anything going, which allowed Seattle lean on the ground game. Neither back for the Panthers got into rhythm. Tetairoa McMillan, the rookie standou,t was non-existent in this one as well, coming into the game with an illness designation. Kenneth Walker III mixed in for 15 for 51 and Jaxon Smith-Njigba led the passing game as he has all season with nine for 72, so you weren’t buried if you started him. Young tight end AJ Barner chipped in a score.

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    But this was Charbonnet’s show front to back, the kind of December performance that, if you had the courage or necessity to start him you were rewarded in a major way.

    Instant reaction: If you had to play Zach Charbonnet, well — congratulations!

  • Kawhi Leonard drops a career-high 55 points to lead Clippers past Pistons for fourth straight win

    Kawhi Leonard did just about everything Sunday night to get the Los Angeles Clippers to a fourth straight win.

    Leonard scored a career-high 55 points while leading the Clippers to a 112-99 win over the Eastern Conference-leading Detroit Pistons at Intuit Dome on Sunday. He had all but four of those points in the first three quarters, and had 11 rebounds to go with it. Leonard’s 55-points also matched the Clippers’ franchise record for most points scored in a single game, a mark James Harden set earlier this season.

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    Leonard hit the 50-point mark in the final minute of the third period with a pull-up jumper from the short corner over Ronald Holland. That got him to 51 points in the game, six more than his previous career high from 2019 when he was with the Toronto Raptors. Leonard dropped 26 of his 55 points in the third quarter alone, one more than he scored in the entire first half.

    The Clippers held a 23-point lead entering the final period, and Leonard sat for the first half or so of the quarter as a result. He eventually came back in to finish the night and got his 55-point outing.

    Leonard ended up shooting 17-of-26 from the floor and 5-of-10 from behind the arc. He went 16-of-17 from the free-throw line, which snapped his streak of 64 consecutive made free throws. Leonard has missed only three free throws all season, and has shot a ridiculous 123-of-126 from the stripe.

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    Cade Cunningham led the Pistons with 27 points and nine assists in the loss, which dropped Detroit to 24-8 on the season. The loss was its second straight. Jalen Duren added 18 points, and Jaden Ivey added 11 off the bench. They were the only three Pistons to hit double figures.

    Harden added 28 points to go with Leonard’s historic night. Nicolas Batum finished with 12. The Clippers shot 47% from the field and managed only five points off the bench.

    While Leonard gets almost all of the credit for Sunday night’s win, and deservedly so, the Clippers have been on a roll lately after a very tough start to the season. They entered this four-game win streak on the heels of a stretch in which they lost 10 of 11 to plummet in the Western Conference standings. All four of these wins have come by double digits, including a 20-point victory over Kevin Durant and the Houston Rockets.

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    The Clippers will be back in action Tuesday night when they host the Sacramento Kings.

  • NFL Week 17 instant reactions: division battle CHAOS, Steelers played scared, will Giants draft a QB?

    Nate Tice & Charles McDonald give their instant reactions and takeaways from Week 17 of NFL action. After providing takeaways from the San Francisco 49ers’ shootout win over the Chicago Bears on Sunday night, the duo provide their 3 Highs, 3 Lows from a wild week around the NFL. The highs include the Philadelphia Eagles holding off the Buffalo Bills late, the Las Vegas Raiders getting the inside track on the first overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft over the New York Giants and the Houston Texans winning their eighth straight on Saturday over the Los Angeles Chargers.

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    For the lows, Nate & Charles hit on the Green Bay Packers showing they can’t be trusted in a loss to the Baltimore Ravens, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Carolina Panthers acting like they’re not interested in winning the NFC South and the Pittsburgh Steelers proving unable to clinch the division against the Cleveland Browns.

    For Extra Credit, the duo discuss Drake Maye’s huge 5-TD performance and Trey McBride setting records for the Arizona Cardinals.

    (1:00) – 49ers beat Bears

    (20:00) – Eagles beat Bills

    (33:15) – Raiders win (lose) tank bowl

    (45:20) – Texans win eighth straight

    (55:30) – Packers can’t be trusted

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    (1:07:05) – Does anyone want to win the NFC South?

    (1:21:35) – Steelers lose to Browns

    (1:33:05) – Extra Credit: Drake Maye & Trey McBride

    CLEVELAND, OHIO - DECEMBER 28: Shedeur Sanders #12 of the Cleveland Browns and Aaron Rodgers #8 of the Pittsburgh Steelers interact after the Cleveland Browns won the game at Huntington Bank Field on December 28, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cleveland Browns defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers 13-6. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)

    CLEVELAND, OHIO – DECEMBER 28: Shedeur Sanders #12 of the Cleveland Browns and Aaron Rodgers #8 of the Pittsburgh Steelers interact after the Cleveland Browns won the game at Huntington Bank Field on December 28, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cleveland Browns defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers 13-6. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)

    (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at Yahoo Sports Podcasts

  • Week 17 fantasy INSTANT takeaways: The players and games that WON YOU your fantasy titles

    Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy Forecast

    Matt Harmon and Chris Allen provide instant fantasy analysis to all the action from Week 17 in the NFL. The two place games in three fantasy buckets: Games we care about the most, games we sort of care about and games that could have been an email.

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    (1:00) – SNF solo recap: xx 49ers, xx Bears

    (20:00) – Boom and Bust players of Week 16: Derrick Henry and Tet McMillan

    (29:00) – Games we care about the most: HOU@LAC, BAL@GB, PHI@BUF, JAX@IND

    (1:03:40) – Games we sort of care about: SEA@CAR, TB@MIA, NO@TEN, PIT@CLE, NYG@LV

    (1:30:30) – Games that could have been an email + Christmas games recaps

    Matt Harmon and Chris Allen provide their instant fantasy analysis to all the action from Week 17.

    Matt Harmon and Chris Allen provide their instant fantasy analysis to all the action from Week 17.

    (Jason Jung)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

  • The High Score Playlist: Week 11 fantasy basketball waiver wire pickups and lineup advice

    Welcome to The High Score Playlist: my weekly column that lets you know who to add off the waiver wire and get in your lineup for the upcoming week in fantasy basketball. You can also read my 9-cat and standard points leagues pickups story for advice in those formats.

    [It’s not too late to create or join a High Score league, a new way to play Fantasy Basketball on Yahoo with simple rosters and scoring]

    Every league is different — sometimes you’ll see an 80%-rostered player on waivers because they’ve been underperforming or someone got impatient. If you think they make sense for your build, by all means — do your thing.

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    The below recs are players under 50% rostered who you can realistically pick up in most leagues.

    Fantasy basketball pickups and advice.

    Fantasy basketball pickups and advice.

    🎧 Who’s in My Rotation: High Score

    Maxime Raynaud – FC, Sacramento Kings (29% rostered)

    At under 30% rostered, Raynaud is one of the best frontcourt adds in High Score, posting double-doubles in four of his last six games while delivering fantasy highs of 38 and 50 over the past two weeks. With Domantas Sabonis out with a partially torn meniscus and reportedly drawing trade interest, the rookie big man is trending toward a top-80 player with upside the rest of the way. Raynaud has logged nearly 30 minutes per night in December, and the Kings offer one of the best fantasy schedules of Week 11: four games, including lighter slates on Tuesday and Thursday. Stable minutes, real production and a great schedule, pick him up in all formats.

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    Isaiah Collier – G, Utah Jazz (15% rostered)

    Collier continues to string together promising High Score performances, posting 37 in Week 10 and 44 the week before. The Jazz play on Tuesday and Thursday, both lighter slates where Collier’s value spikes because there’s less competition for lineup spots. He also draws a matchup against the Clippers, who are allowing 56.5 fantasy points per game to opposing point guards, the third-worst mark in fantasy hoops this year. Collier remains one of the best under-20% rostered sources of assists and plays with enough pace and activity to pop for 35-45 fantasy points again in Week 11.

    Neemias Queta – FC, Boston Celtics (35% rostered)

    The Celtics face the Kings and Jazz, two teams ranking in the bottom-10 in fantasy points allowed to opposing centers, giving Queta two high-leverage matchups out of Boston’s three-game schedule this week. The lone remaining opponent is the Clippers — a team he already dropped 35 fantasy points on earlier this season (14 points, 9 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 stocks). His roster percentage has dipped 2% over the last 24 hours, making it more likely he’s available in your league. With steady minutes and elite per-minute production, Queta is a priority add this week.

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    Dennis Schröder – G, Sacramento Kings (32% rostered)

    Like Raynaud, Schröder benefits from Sacramento’s four-game schedule. With Zach LaVine sidelined, interim coach Doug Christie has leaned on Schröder for more ballhandling and stability. Over the past two weeks, he’s averaged 14 points, 6 assists, 3 rebounds, and 1 steal — good for 32 High Score fantasy points per game. His ceiling was on full display with 51 fantasy points in Week 10, and if he pushes toward 30 minutes (he’s been around 25 since Dec. 11), Schröder is worth plugging in for at least a couple of games.

  • Fantasy Basketball Waiver Wire: Brook Lopez, Pelle Larsson among top adds in 9-cat/standard points leagues for Week 11

    Welcome back to The Playlist — your weekly scan of the fantasy basketball landscape, where we break down waiver adds for 9-cat and standard points leagues to help you stay competitive.

    Week 11 offers some normalcy in fantasy hoops, as no team plays fewer than three games this week. Streaming could be an option any day. Still, I’d prioritize teams like the 76ers, Celtics, Clippers, Jazz, Kings and Pistons on the lighter slates (playing Tuesday and Thursday). Now that we got that out of the way, let’s talk pickups.

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    You can also read my High Score pickups story for advice in that format.

    Fantasy basketball pickups and advice.

    Fantasy basketball pickups and advice.

    🎧 Who’s in My Rotation: Shallow leagues

    Brook Lopez – C, Los Angeles Clippers (22% rostered)

    Lopez hit a career-best 9 3s a day after Christmas. That’s unlikely to happen again, but with Ivica Zubac out for weeks, Lopez should be added. His calling cards — blocks, FG% and low turnovers — still hold mid-round value in 9-cat even when the shot isn’t falling.

    In points leagues, he’s more matchup-driven, but any night he posts 2–3 blocks with double-digit points, he’ll net at least 20-30 fantasy points. With the Clippers light in the frontcourt, Lopez’s role remains sturdy enough to prioritize in shallow formats.

    Bilal Coulibaly – SG/SF, Washington Wizards (25% rostered)

    Coulibaly hasn’t cracked 30 minutes lately, but he continues to produce on a per-minute basis in points, rebounds and stocks. Over his last three games, he’s averaging 1.36 FPPM, a high mark that shows he has mixed-league appeal for Week 11 with four games on tap.

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    The Wizards have plenty of incentive to get their young players more run. In Week 10, Coulibaly was 73rd in points leagues and 54th in 9-cat leagues — evidence that he should be a target across league formats.

    🎧 Who’s in My Rotation: Deeper leagues

    Larsson is carving out a real rotation role with Tyler Herro out and Davion Mitchell dealing with a nagging ankle injury. Larsson is coming off two strong and efficient outings, averaging 18.5 points, 5.0 rebounds and 6.0 assists, so I’d get on it before someone beats you to it.

    That’s a lot of value relative to the cost when Miami plays four games this week, including a Saturday-Sunday back-to-back to close out Week 11.

    Luke Kornet – C, San Antonio Spurs (9% rostered)

    Kornet is coming off the bench, but the production is still there. He’s been a top-50 player in 9-cat since Victor Wembanyama returned, and his value hinges on two strengths: rebounding and rim protection.

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    San Antonio plays four games, and Monday’s matchup comes against a Cavs defense that is bottom-10 against centers. Add in the possibility that Wemby could rest one leg of their Friday/Saturday back-to-back, and Kornet becomes a decent streaming option for his defense, rebounding and efficient scoring on low volume.

    Kris Dunn – PG/SG, Los Angeles Clippers (11% rostered)

    Dunn is shooting 57% from the field this season and continues to be one of the most reliable per-minute thieves in the league, averaging 1.5 steals per game. Over the last two weeks, he’s posted:

    Those numbers rank him 83rd in 9-cat over that span. The Clippers also play three games on lighter slates, making Dunn an excellent Week 11 plug-and-play option. I’ve added him to points league rosters as well as 9-cat.

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    Hugo González – SF, Boston Celtics (3% rostered)

    The 19-year-old continues to impress as a hustle guy and rangy defender, doing the little things to help the Celtics win. He’s begun eating into Jordan Walsh’s minutes, and González has been putting in work, quietly posting two double-digit rebound games in Week 10 and having at least two stocks in four of his last five games.

    The coaching staff seems pleased with his effort, as he played at least 30 minutes for the second time this season, scoring 13 points with 6 boards, 3 assists and 2 steals.

    Hugo is firmly in deep-league streaming territory with Boston playing on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday this week.

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    Other deep league options to consider:

    • Nique Clifford – SG/SF, Sacramento Kings (2%)

    • Max Christie – SG/SF, Dallas Mavericks (6%)

    • Bones Hyland – PG, Minnesota Timberwolves (2%)

    • Egor Dëmin – PG, Brooklyn Nets (10%)

    • Marvin Bagley III – PF/C, Washington Wizards (10%)

  • Bears defense ‘let the offense down’ after Caleb Williams-Brock Purdy combine for 11 touchdowns in shootout

    The Chicago Bears have proven a lot this season. After being doubted early on for their last-second wins and poor opponents, the Bears have shown they can hang with the best the NFC has to offer as the regular season comes to a close.

    Sunday night provided more evidence that was the case, as Caleb Williams turned in arguably the best game of his career in a 42-38 loss to Brock Purdy and the San Francisco 49ers. With time winding down, Williams nearly led yet another game-winning drive, coming up just short on a pass to the end zone as time expired.

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    It was a disappointing result, but Williams and the Bears’ offense can still hold their heads high after dropping 38 points.

    The defense, however, can’t say the same thing. After the loss, safety Jaquan Brisker shouldered the blame, saying the defense “let the offense down” in the shootout, per ESPN.

    “We let the offense down,” Bears safety Jaquan Brisker said. “I’m going to say it. We let the offense down, period. I feel like Caleb and them, they gave us enough points to do what we had to do to win. The defense didn’t.”

    [Get more Bears news: Chicago team feed]

    It didn’t look like that would be the case early, as the Bears picked off Purdy on the first play of the game and ran it back for an early touchdown. After that, Purdy diced up the Bears’ defense, completing 24 of 33 attempts for 303 yards and three passing touchdowns. Purdy also added two rushing touchdowns, giving him five scores on the day.

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    While Bears coach Ben Johnson didn’t take things as far as Brisker after the game, Johnson admitted the Bears’ defense didn’t do enough to “affect” Purdy in the pocket. The Bears registered just one sack in the contest, and rarely disrupted Purdy’s rhythm and timing on pass plays. Though the Bears’ defense forced two punts — something no other defense has done against the 49ers in December — giving up 42 points proved to be too much for the Bears’ offense to match.

    But it nearly got the job done. After a slow start, which saw the Bears go three-and-out on their first two drives, Williams put points on the board in five of the team’s last seven drives. In doing so, he looked like the franchise quarterback Bears fans have been dreaming of since the days of Sid Luckman. Williams connected on multiple high-level throws in the contest, with two long touchdowns to rookies Luther Burden and Colston Loveland — both of whom also turned in standout performances — and a handful of accurate, chunk gains to keep the chains moving when the Bears needed it the most.

    Williams finished the contest 25 of 42, throwing for 330 yards and two scores in the loss. He nearly had a third touchdown as time ran out, but a possible game-winning pass fell short of wideout Jahdae Walker in the end zone on the game’s final play.

    Williams took responsibility for the miss, saying he “can’t dirt the ball” in that situation. Though the Bears lost, Williams said the game proved the Bears are “a team to be reckoned with” ahead of its first playoff appearance since 2020.

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    If Williams can continue to play the way he did Sunday night, his statement could be proven right. As the regular season comes to a close, Williams appears to be trending in the right direction with the playoffs looming.

    The Bears’ defense, on the other hand, needs to find a way to regroup over the next couple weeks. For as well as Williams and the offense performed Sunday night, giving up 42 points in a game is rarely going to result in a win and the opponents are going to get only more difficult in the postseason.