Category: Sport

  • AFC Playoff chaos, Packers claim 1 seed + Shedeur Sanders named Browns’ QB1

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    What should we make of the AFC with a month left in the regular season? Yahoo Sports’ Andrew Siciliano and Frank Schwab analyze the crucial results from Week 14 including the Denver Broncos gaining back the conference lead, the Jacksonville Jaguars taking control of the AFC South and much more. We also recap all things SNF with the Houston Texans’ victory over the Kansas City Chiefs as well as the Green Bay Packers taking back the NFC North with a win over the Chicago Bears. Closing things out, the crew breaks down what it means for Shedeur Sanders after he becomes the Cleveland Browns’ starting QB for the rest of the season before giving their “One More Thing.”

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    (3:25) – AFC chaos: Broncos, Colts, Jaguars, Steelers

    (24:10) – Texans beat Chiefs on SNF

    (39:45) – Packers take the lead over Bears in NFC North

    (47:10) – Breaking down Shedeur Sanders’ big day

    (59:25) – One More Thing

    Can the Colts survive the season without Daniel Jones? (Photo by Mike Carlson/Getty Images)

    Can the Colts survive the season without Daniel Jones? (Photo by Mike Carlson/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

  • Ravens coach John Harbaugh speaks with NFL about overturned TD call in loss to Steelers: ‘It didn’t clear anything up’

    Baltimore Ravens head coach John Harbaugh called the league on Monday, looking for clarification after a critical touchdown was called back in the team’s loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers the day before.

    When he hung up, Harbaugh was just as confused as he was before he made the call.

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    “It’s about as clear as mud right now,” Harbaugh said of the NFL’s catch rule, via ESPN’s Jamison Hensley. “That’s how I feel about it.”

    Ravens quarterback Lamar Jackson found Isaiah Likely late in the fourth quarter on Sunday afternoon, and it appeared like Likely had scored a go-ahead touchdown. Even CBS analyst Tony Romo was fully confident in the play as officials were looking at it.

    But after a review, officials reversed their call and determined that it was not a touchdown. The Ravens did not score again after that, and the Steelers ended up escaping with a 27-22 win.

    “The receiver controlled the ball in the air, had his right foot down, then his left foot down,” NFL vice president of instant replay Mark Butterworth said. “The control is the first aspect of the catch. The second aspect is two feet or a body part in bounds, which he did have.

    “Then the third step is an act common to the game, and before he could get the third foot down, the ball was ripped out. Therefore, it was an incomplete pass.”

    Plenty of Ravens players were livid in the locker room after the game. DeAndre Hopkins deleted a social media post criticizing the referees, and running back Derrick Henry said it was tough “when the game’s in the ref’s hands.”

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    Harbaugh spoke with the league about that call, and an Aaron Rodgers interception that was reversed, on Monday.

    “It didn’t clear anything up,” Harbaugh said. “It didn’t make it any easier to understand either one of the two calls. They’re very hard to understand how they get overturned, but they did and that’s where it stands.”

    As for whether or not that call cost the Ravens the game, Harbaugh stopped short.

    “You never know what cost you the game,” he said.

    Regardless, the result stands. The Ravens now sit at 6-7 and fell out of first place in the AFC North with the loss. They are now ninth in the AFC standings, and will have to be just about perfect the rest of the way — starting on Sunday against the Cincinnati Bengals — if they are going to make a fourth straight postseason appearance.

  • Timberwolves’ Rudy Gobert ejected after drilling Mark Williams with a forearm mid-dunk in loss to Suns

    Minnesota Timberwolves center Rudy Gobert was ejected from their 108-105 loss to the Phoenix Suns on Monday night after checking Mark Williams in the air with his forearm as he was going up for a dunk.

    Midway through the third quarter of the contest at the Target Center, Williams drove through the lane and started to rise up for what should have been an easy dunk. He had a clear path to the rim, as Gobert was well out of the way to his right.

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    But once Williams was in the air, Gobert stepped in and drilled him hard in the ribs with his forearm — which sent Williams flying off track and down to the court hard.

    Gobert seemed to know that he had committed a foul, as he raised a finger up to take credit for it instantly. But officials upgraded the foul to a Flagrant 2 due to significant contact to Williams’ ribs, which led to Gobert’s ejection.

    Gobert had 15 points and eight rebounds when he left the game. The 33-year-old entered Monday night averaging 11 points and 10.2 rebounds per game this season, his 12th in the league. He’s in the first year of a new three-year, $109.5 million deal with the Timberwolves.

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    Williams stayed in the contest after initially remaining down on the floor, shaken up after the foul, and he split his free throws. He threw down a dunk right after the second free throw, too, which put the Suns up by two points at the time.

    The Timberwolves went on a 7-0 run and held the Suns scoreless for nearly three full minutes down the stretch to cut the game back to just a single point, thanks to a short bucket from Anthony Edwards. But that came with just 8.9 seconds left. The Suns hit a pair of free throws after that and came up with one final stop to escape with the three-point win.

    Williams led the Suns with 22 points and seven rebounds, and Collin Gillespie added 19 points. Dillon Brooks finished with 18 points. The win pushed the Suns to 14-10 on the season.

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    Edwards had 40 points and shot 15 of 21 from the field to lead the Timberwolves. Julius Randle finished with 21 points and eight assists, and Bones Hyland added 14 points off the bench. The loss snapped a five-game win streak for the Timberwolves, who now sit at 15-9 on the season.

    Minnesota will be back in action on Friday night against the Golden State Warriors.

  • Jalen Hurts makes history by turning the ball over twice on a single play in 5-turnover night during loss to Chargers

    This is one of the wilder turnovers of this or any season — and a bad look for Jalen Hurts in arguably the worst game of his career.

    With Philadelphia threatening to score its first touchdown Monday night in the second quarter against the Chargers, the Eagles faced third-and-2 at the Los Angeles 21.

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    Hurts forced a pass to A.J. Brown on a slant as Brown was surrounded by three defenders. Da’Shawn Hand was positioned perfectly for the interception and picked the ball off just beyond the line of gain.

    Hand, being a defensive lineman, is not too familiar with handling the ball. And it showed. As he returned the ball, running back Will Shipley punched it out from behind, sending it hurtling back in Hurts’ direction.

    Hurts was able to corral the ball. But just for a moment.

    Almost as soon as Hurts gained control, 340-pound defensive tackle Jamaree Caldwell was on top of him. And Caldwell successfully dislodged the ball.

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    Chargers linebacker Troy Dye got to it first from there and made the wise decision, considering all that he’d just witnessed. Dye jumped on the ball and secured it on the turf with no effort for a return. The end result of the play saw the Chargers take over possession.

    If you’re counting, that’s an interception thrown by Hurts to Hand, a lost fumble by Hand, a fumble recovery by Hurts, a lost fumble by Hurts and a fumble recovery by Dye. And yes, that’s two turnovers on one play for Philadelphia’s quarterback.

    According to Elias Sports, Hurts was the first NFL player since 1978 to commit two turnovers on the same play.

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    The Chargers converted the turnover into a field goal for a 10-3 lead late in the second quarter. And they went on to a 22-19 win in overtime that ended with Hurts throwing his fourth interception of the game on a night when he committed five total turnovers.

    In a season filled with frustration for Philadelphia’s offense, this is a new low point.

  • NFL Power Rankings entering Week 15: Why can’t the Texans make a run in a flawed and weird AFC?

    AFC East: Buffalo Bills | Miami Dolphins | New England Patriots | New York Jets

    AFC North: Baltimore Ravens | Cincinnati Bengals | Cleveland Browns | Pittsburgh Steelers

    AFC South: Houston Texans | Indianapolis Colts | Jacksonville Jaguars | Tennessee Titans

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    AFC West: Denver Broncos | Kansas City Chiefs | Las Vegas Raiders | Los Angeles Chargers

    NFC East: Dallas Cowboys | New York Giants | Philadelphia Eagles | Washington Commanders

    NFC North: Chicago Bears | Detroit Lions | Green Bay Packers | Minnesota Vikings

    NFC South: Atlanta Falcons | Carolina Panthers | New Orleans Saints | Tampa Bay Buccaneers

    NFC West: Arizona Cardinals | Los Angeles Rams | San Francisco 49ers | Seattle Seahawks

    The common perception is that a team needs an elite quarterback and powerhouse offense to win a Super Bowl. While that’s the ideal path, it’s not the only one. We don’t need to look too far in the past to find a champion that wasn’t in that mold.

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    We like to remember the 2024 Eagles as an offensive power because Saquon Barkley had a historic season, but they were first in defensive DVOA and just 13th in offensive DVOA. It was a champion founded on a fantastic defense, even if that might not be the Eagles’ legacy.

    The question for the Houston Texans is if their offense can be good enough for a deep playoff run. Because there’s no question Houston’s defense is of championship quality. The Texans are first in the NFL in yards allowed, points allowed and EPA (expected points added) allowed per play and second in defensive DVOA behind the Seahawks. Anyone who has seen the Texans wreck Josh Allen (career high eight sacks taken) and Patrick Mahomes (career low 19.8 passer rating) the past few weeks would likely vote Houston as the best defense in the NFL. Its offense, however, is 24th in DVOA and 24th in EPA per play, and a unit that subpar might be a problem.

    But look around at a weird AFC: Everyone has a flaw this season. The Texans’ defense might be the most bankable asset in the AFC playoffs, other than Allen. And we saw what happened when Houston faced Allen in Week 12.

    There seems to be a good chance we get a somewhat random Super Bowl matchup this season. It doesn’t look like there are any great teams. It might come down to which team gets hot. There aren’t many teams hotter than the Texans, who have won five in a row, with four coming against good teams (Jaguars, Bills, Colts, Chiefs) behind a defense that is battering opponents. They are giving off a bit of a vibe similar to the 2015 Broncos, who won Super Bowl 50 with a superior defense after Peyton Manning hit the wall that season. In a season defined by parity, especially in the AFC, a Super Bowl team that started 3-5 and has a bottom 10 offense might actually be fitting.

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    Here are the power rankings after Week 14 of the NFL season:

    Congrats, Raiders. You finally reached the bottom. The Titans have at least been frisky for most of the past few weeks, and it paid off with a win at Cleveland. The Raiders continue to look worse every week. The last time the Raiders had a competitive game they could be proud of was Nov. 2, when they lost to the Jaguars in overtime. They might not play another competitive game for the rest of the season either. What a bad organization.

    Not that beating the Browns is worthy of a parade, but the Titans got their first legitimate win of the season (the first actual win, over the Cardinals, was the flukiest victory of the NFL this season and maybe this decade). The one downside is draft positioning. According to Tankathon, the Titans went from first in the draft order to third with the win. The Giants would pick first if the season ended today. But there’s a lot of time for that to be settled, and winning is good for the Titans.

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    The Cardinals haven’t been blown out too often, but Sunday’s 45-17 loss to the Rams was ugly. The Cardinals might not really be the fourth-worst team in the NFL, but it is also hard to give the benefit of the doubt to a team that has lost 10 of 11 games, even if many of those losses were in close games. It has been a horribly disappointing season for a Cardinals team that seemed to be making strides under Jonathan Gannon.

    The Giants don’t want to be 2-11, but the front office had to be happy to see themselves sitting with the first pick of the NFL Draft with four games to go. That would put them in an advantageous position, though there isn’t some Myles Garrett-level No. 1 pick in the 2026 draft class. The Giants could entertain offers from teams looking for a quarterback though. It’s a lost season but having another high first-round pick is a good consolation.

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    The Jets had been playing better, but losing by 24 at home to the Dolphins is a reminder of how bad they are. There were “Sell the team” chants during the loss, but it’s not like owner Woody Johnson believes he’s the problem. There’s not much to look forward to until the offseason, and the last four weeks might get really rough with quarterbacks Justin Fields and Tyrod Taylor dealing with injuries.

    The Saints have road wins over the Panthers and Buccaneers, the top two teams in the division. Plenty of teams down in this portion of the rankings don’t have any quality wins. The organization, which has refused to admit it needs a rebuild, shouldn’t be fooled into thinking that it’s closer than it is due to those wins. But the Saints might. At very least, it’s a great sign that the team is fighting hard still in Kellen Moore’s first season.

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    The Browns didn’t truly “move up” in the rankings after a home loss to the Titans, but the Jets surely had to move down after whatever they were doing Sunday. So the Browns got an undeserved bump. For Browns fans, Sunday should have felt like a win. Shedeur Sanders continues to show promise. It’s too early to say if he’s the answer, but he’s closer than almost every other fifth-round quarterback we’ve seen. And the loss helped out the Browns’ draft position, too.

    Players should play if they’re healthy enough, but Washington should make an exception for Jayden Daniels. Seeing him get injured again Sunday and leave the game was a sign that this isn’t his season and shutting him down is best for everyone involved. Having him suffer another injury when the team is 3-10 would be egregiously bad leadership. This is a completely lost season for a very good player. Just start again in 2026.

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    Getting a Thursday night game in Week 15 might be the worst thing for Falcons head coach Raheem Morris, who is clearly on the hot seat. The team is falling apart, and its season looks even worse because the NFC South was there for the taking. Now Atlanta gets three hours on a national broadcast at Tampa Bay, with everyone paying attention to how it has bungled things. “Our fan base deserves a winner,” Morris said. “The only thing you can do is try to go give them the best effort you can on Thursday night.”

    J.J. McCarthy had a good game. He had 163 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions. It doesn’t mean that he has arrived, but it’s a more promising step than we’ve typically seen from him this season. The Vikings’ season is lost, and the rest of it has to be spent figuring out if McCarthy can be a viable starter in 2026. Sunday’s performance gives the team hope.

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    We have to rank the Colts for what they are now, with major quarterback issues the rest of the way. And this ranking might be too high for that. Perhaps Riley Leonard can keep the Colts afloat (if he’s healthy, that is), but that’s a long shot. If a 7-1 start fizzles into missing the playoffs due to a losing streak and then Daniel Jones’ injury, it’s a depressing turn. And it’s not like Jones’ injury doesn’t have a major impact on the Colts in 2026, too.

    The Bengals were on the verge of beating the Bills — they outplayed Buffalo on the road for three-plus quarters — and the Ravens’ continued implosion was a positive for Cincinnati too. Then Joe Burrow threw a pick 6 to Bills corner Christian Benford, who made a remarkable play on a blitz, and the Bills pulled away after that. We’ll see if the Bengals continue their momentum now that their slim playoff hopes (3% according to The Athletic’s projections) are practically over.

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    The Dolphins can get back to .500 with a win over the Steelers this weekend. Miami has beaten a lot of bad teams, which means it shouldn’t be ranked any higher than this, but it’s still a remarkable rebound from a 1-6 start. The Dolphins are doing this all with Tua Tagovailoa being a low-volume passer, which is weird. He hasn’t thrown for more than 173 yards in any game in Miami’s four-game winning streak, but Miami has found other ways to succeed. Is Mike McDaniel safe for 2026 already?

    The Ravens are somehow a bad team. Losing to the Bengals and Steelers in back-to-back home games leaves no doubt that even if the Ravens somehow win the AFC North, there’s just nothing better coming for this team. They’re 21st in EPA (expected points added) per play on offense and a matching 21st in EPA per play allowed on defense. It’s a strong organization with a great quarterback so the odds they bounce back in 2026 are strong, but the best outcome for this Ravens team seems to be a division title with a record barely above .500 and a quick playoff exit.

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    Carolina had to perk up at Tampa Bay’s home loss on Sunday. That gives the Panthers a better shot to win the division by simply splitting the two remaining games against the Bucs. The Panthers are up and down and still have a tough game remaining against Seattle in Week 17, but they’re in the mix. That’s a positive outcome for this season, no matter how it turns out.

    The Buccaneers hadn’t had a loss to a team currently under .500 before Sunday. But it’s hard to take them too seriously anymore after a 24-20 home loss to the Saints, who had won only two games this season before beating Tampa Bay. Baker Mayfield’s play has really slipped since early in the season, and injuries have to be a factor. The Buccaneers are still favorites to win the NFC South but it’s getting tougher to trust them to finish the season strong.

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    Given all the negativity surrounding the Steelers a week ago, Sunday’s win at Baltimore had to be one of the most satisfying of Mike Tomlin’s career. Will the noise about Tomlin and the team parting ways quiet if they win the AFC North, which they are favored to do now (75.3% chance via DVOA)? Probably not. But Sunday was a reminder that he is still a pretty good coach. The Steelers are a very flawed team, but one with an inside track at a division title.

    The overreaction to the Chiefs’ season will be fierce. People have been dying to dunk on the NFL’s current dynasty, and now is their chance. No, the Chiefs don’t need a full rebuild. They just haven’t won close games. Kansas City is still the No. 7 team in DVOA this season after Sunday’s loss, ahead of teams like Denver, Buffalo, Philadelphia and New England. Haters will get in their licks now. Level-headed people will understand it’s just an unlucky season for a team that’s still good.

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    The Cowboys technically moved up in the rankings, but that’s artificial because the Chiefs, Buccaneers and Colts had to move behind them and others this week. Still, Dallas is playing at a near playoff level lately, and a loss at a good Detroit team doesn’t change that much. But starting 3-5-1 put the Cowboys in a place they couldn’t afford any losses, and now their playoff dream is all but dead.

    Sunday changed everything in the AFC South. The Colts lost Daniel Jones, and the Jaguars picked up a critical win. It’s hard to watch the Jaguars and Texans and believe Jacksonville is the better team right now (more on the Texans in a bit) but they do lead the division. The AFC South might come down to whether the Jaguars can beat the Broncos or the Texans can beat the Chargers, because the other remaining games for both teams are all winnable.

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    Jalen Hurts had two interceptions in the first 13 weeks of the season. He had never thrown four interceptions in an NFL game until Monday night, with the fourth pick coming in overtime to clinch a loss to the Chargers. On a night when Saquon Barkley finally broke out with his second 100-yard game, Philadelphia’s offense still scored only one touchdown. Philadelphia’s defense is still good enough to carry the team to some wins in the playoffs. The offense simply isn’t good enough at the moment for Philly to have more than a very brief stay in the postseason. And 14 weeks into the season, that’s unlikely to be fixed.

    Here are the Lions’ results since the start of October: win, loss, win, loss, win, loss, win, loss, win. The win over the Cowboys hinted at their potential again, but it’s hard to rank them much higher than this when they haven’t put together a two-game winning streak in more than two months. Also, Detroit’s ability to make a deep playoff run probably relies on the Lions not catching any cold-weather games, given how much worse they are in outdoor games. The Lions are a good team but it’s hard to talk yourself into a Super Bowl run for them.

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    The Chargers have their issues. The offensive line allowed Justin Herbert to get pounded all Monday night by the Eagles’ pass rush, resulting in the offense scoring just one touchdown. But Herbert did just enough, and L.A.’s defense was fantastic as it picked off Jalen Hurts four times, including the game-winner in overtime. Had the Chargers’ offensive line stayed remotely healthy, this might have been the best team in football. As it stands, it’s still a very well-coached team with a star at quarterback. In a wide-open AFC, that might be enough to make a run.

    The 49ers seemingly had three difficult games to end the season: at Colts, vs. Bears, vs. Seahawks. Daniel Jones’ injury affects the NFC playoff race too, because if Indianapolis can’t magically find a quarterback down the stretch, that game becomes a lot easier for the 49ers. So would their path to a wild-card spot, which is remarkable given their injuries through the season.

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    We’re looking at the very real possibility of the AFC playoffs beginning without Lamar Jackson, Patrick Mahomes and Joe Burrow. Can Josh Allen and the Bills take advantage of that? They were on upset watch again for most of Sunday against the Bengals. Allen, who is up to 34 total touchdowns (22 passing, 12 rushing) this season, gives them a chance against anyone. It’s just hard to depend on everything else around him.

    This is a big jump for the Texans, but they pass the eye test of a team that is peaking at the right time. Their defense continues to be fantastic, holding Patrick Mahomes to a 42.4% completion percentage and a 19.8 passer rating, the lowest marks in a game for his career. Houston’s offense is inconsistent, but there’s no complete team in the AFC. Houston’s defense is the most reliable unit in the conference.

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    Maybe there will be a time when the Bears get exposed and move way down in the rankings, but not after a 28-21 loss at Green Bay that was decided in the last minute. And not less than two weeks after a decisive win at the Eagles. For now, it was just a competitive loss to a good team, which wasn’t a bad outcome for a Bears team that had no signature win this season before beating the Eagles. Let’s see how the Week 16 rematch against the Packers goes.

    Hey, remember a few weeks ago when there was a weird groundswell to put Matt LaFleur on the hot seat? How cute. LaFleur never deserved that treatment, and now the Packers have consecutive wins over the Lions and Bears to get back to first place in the NFC North. Packers at Broncos is a fascinating Week 15 matchup between two very good teams that still have some questions.

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    It’s hard to believe but true: The Patriots can clinch the AFC East title with three games to go. If New England beats Buffalo on Sunday, the Patriots will have a three-game lead and own the tiebreaker due to a sweep, so the division race would be over. The Patriots are still fairly low in the advanced metrics despite their record — 14th in total DVOA, 10th in offense and 25th in defense — but this has been a wildly successful season no matter how it turns out.

    The Broncos might need the Patriots to lose on Sunday to the Bills. Because there aren’t many other difficult games remaining for New England, and the Broncos have four tough ones left: vs. Packers, vs. Jaguars, at Chiefs, vs. Chargers. The good news for the Broncos is they clinched the common opponents tiebreaker (second tiebreaker after conference record for non-divisional teams) over the Patriots with a win over the Raiders, a team New England lost to in Week 1.

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    The Seahawks’ 37-9 win over Atlanta brought Seattle’s road record to 6-1 and also strengthened their claim as the best team in the NFL. That spot still goes to the Rams, but it’s a 1A and 1B situation atop the rankings. The gap between those two teams and everyone else continues to grow. If Seattle beats a Daniel Jones-less Colts team at home Sunday, that sets up a massive Week 16 Thursday night showdown against the Rams. And that rematch is in Seattle.

    The Rams put up 530 yards and 45 points against the Cardinals, which is how a No. 1 team should look. Margin of victory doesn’t matter in the standings but it is a pretty good indicator of which teams have staying power and which are just getting by for now. The Seahawks lead the NFL with a +161 point differential, the Rams are second at +152 and no other team is above +110. The loss at Carolina wasn’t great, but it happens and the Rams are as good as anyone this season. They do have a tricky game vs. Detroit on Sunday, four days before the NFL’s regular-season matchup of the year at Seattle.

  • Week 14 Fantasy playoffs TRUST METER: Colts cooked? Can we trust these 7 WRs? + Waiver Wire adds

    Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy Forecast

    Welcome to our first edition of the ‘Fantasy Playoffs Trust Meter’ with Matt Harmon and Justin Boone. The dynamic duo asks the question for some of the most important players we’ve been relying on all season: Can we trust them in the fantasy playoffs? The two put them through the meter ahead of Week 15. Boone also shares his backup RB rankings of the fantasy postseason and top waiver wire adds for this week.

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    (1:00) – Matt’s MNF solo recap: Chargers 22, Eagles 19

    (22:00) – Justin Boone joins the show

    (24:30) – Fantasy Playoffs Trust Meter intro

    (25:00) – Trust meter: Colts offense without Daniel Jones, Patrick Mahomes and Rashee Rice, Lamar Jackson

    (42:30) – Trust meter: Justin Jefferson, George Pickens, Emeka Egbuka, Jameson Williams, Brian Thomas Jr., DK Metcalf, Kyle Pitts

    (1:14:45)- Justin Boone’s backup RB rankings: Who are the best stashes for the fantasy playoffs?

    (1:28:40) – Top Waiver Wire adds for Week 15

    Welcome to our first edition of the 'Fantasy Playoffs Trust Meter' with Matt Harmon and Justin Boone. The dynamic duo asks the question for some of the most important players we've been relying on all season: Can we trust them in the fantasy playoffs? The two put them through the meter ahead of Week 15. Boone also shares his backup RB rankings of the fantasy postseason and top waiver wire adds for this week.

    Welcome to our first edition of the ‘Fantasy Playoffs Trust Meter’ with Matt Harmon and Justin Boone. The dynamic duo asks the question for some of the most important players we’ve been relying on all season: Can we trust them in the fantasy playoffs? The two put them through the meter ahead of Week 15. Boone also shares his backup RB rankings of the fantasy postseason and top waiver wire adds for this week.

    (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

  • Eagles vs. Chargers: Philadelphia’s spiral continues with 5 Jalen Hurts turnovers, including 4 INTs in OT loss

    The Philadelphia Eagles’ defense was very good on Monday night. It just needed the offense to come through with one clutch drive in overtime.

    That was too much to ask.

    The Eagles got just one touchdown in regulation, as they were unable to put the Los Angeles Chargers away. After the Chargers took a lead on a field goal for their first possession of overtime, a touchdown would have won the game and a field goal would have tied it. Instead, Jalen Hurts threw his fourth interception of the game with the Eagles in field-goal range. Just like that, Philadelphia was dealt another disappointing loss, falling 22-19 to the Chargers.

    “We keep continuing to beat ourselves,” Saquon Barkley said after the defeat. “Not doing the little things right, not focusing on the details. … Last year was last year is what I keep saying. Now we’ve got to move on. We know this one is going to sting. We’ve got a short week. “

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    The Eagles are still likely to make the playoffs. It’s not out of the question they can make a Super Bowl run. But the story of their whole season, and their problem going forward, is the disappearance of the offense. It doesn’t seem like it’s fixable, either.

    Both teams struggle on offense

    One play from the first half summed up a sloppy offensive game.

    Hurts threw an interception right to defensive lineman Da’Shawn Hand, who had dropped into a zone coverage. Hand started to run with the ball and he was stripped for a fumble that Hurts recovered. But Hurts was stripped as well, and the Chargers fell on that fumble. It was the rare NFL play in which there were three separate turnovers, including two by Hurts.

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    Hurts had a rough game overall. He had two interceptions and the lost fumble after his interception. He had a 35.2 passer rating through three quarters and the Eagles had not scored a touchdown. He finished with five total turnovers and a hideous 31.3 QB rating.

    “I didn’t play well enough. Too many turnovers,” Hurts said. “Lots of opportunities, especially when you get on the other side of the 50 [yard line]. And I wasn’t able to get us in the box.”

  • Miami Heat vs. Orlando Magic: How to watch the 2025 NBA Cup, where to stream and more

    The 2025 Emirates NBA Cup is wrapping up this week. The annual in-season tournament’s East Quarterfinals will be held on Tuesday, Dec. 9, beginning with the Miami Heat visiting the Orlando Magic tipping off at 6 p.m. ET. That game marks the first of the night; the New York Knicks vs. Toronto Raptors game will immediately follow at 8:30 p.m. ET. Then, on Wednesday, Dec. 10, the West Quarterfinals will take place with the San Antonio Spurs visiting the Los Angeles Lakers and the Phoenix Suns at the Oklahoma City Thunder. Semifinals and the Championship Final will be held on Dec. 13 and 16 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

    You can catch the Orlando Magic vs. Miami Heat NBA Cup quarterfinal on Prime Video, the platform holds exclusive rights to every playoff game and the Championship Final in December. Find out how to watch this game and all the rest now.

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    How to watch the Miami Heat vs. Orlando Magic:

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    Date: Dec. 9, 2025

    Time: 6 p.m. ET

    Streaming: Prime Video

    What channel do I need to watch NBA Cup games live?

    While many games in the group stage were televised on broadcast TV, this week’s quarterfinal between the Miami Heat and Orlando Magic will stream exclusively on Prime Video.

    How to stream 2025 NBA Cup games:

    You can catch every playoff game as well as the Championship final on Prime Video.

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  • New York Knicks vs. Toronto Raptors: How to watch the 2025 NBA Cup, where to stream and more

    There’s just a week left in the 2025 Emirates NBA Cup, and by Dec. 16, the players of one NBA team will snag the NBA Cup trophy and find themselves a half a million dollars richer. The annual in-season tournament’s East Quarterfinals, on Tuesday, Dec. 9, feature the New York Knicks vs. Toronto Raptors, their game tips off at 8 p.m. ET on Prime Video. The platform holds exclusive rights to this game and every other NBA Cup playoff game all the way through to the Championship final on Dec. 16.

    Also on Tuesday, you can catch the other East Quarterfinal, between the Miami Heat and Orlando Magic, tipping off at 6 p.m. ET. Then, on Wednesday, Dec. 10, the West Quarterfinals will take place with the San Antonio Spurs visiting the Los Angeles Lakers and the Phoenix Suns at the Oklahoma City Thunder. Semifinals and the Championship Final will be held on Dec. 13 and 16 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

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    Find out how to watch the Knicks vs. Raptors NBA Cup quarterfinal and the rest of the tournament now.

    How to watch the New York Knicks vs. Toronto Raptors:

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    Date: Dec. 9, 2025

    Time: 8:30 p.m. ET

    Streaming: Prime Video

    What channel do I need to watch the New York Knicks vs. Toronto Raptors?

    While many games in the group stage were televised on broadcast TV, this week’s quarterfinal between the New York Knicks and the Toronto Raptors will stream exclusively on Prime Video on Dec. 9 at 8:30 p.m. ET.

    How to stream the Knicks vs. Raptors:

    You can catch the Knicks vs. Raptors and every other NBA Cup playoff game on Prime Video.

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  • The Week 6 AP men’s basketball poll can tell the future

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    🚨 Headlines

    🏈 Chargers 22, Eagles 19 (OT): The Chargers (9-4) intercepted Jalen Hurts four times, including on the final play of the night, to win for the fifth time in six games and hand the Eagles (8-5) their third straight loss.

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    ⚽️ Seminoles crowned champs: Florida State beat Stanford, 1-0, to win its fifth women’s soccer national title (2014, 2018, 2021, 2023, 2025). Wrianna Hudson scored the game-winner in the 87th minute.

    🏈 Heisman finalists: Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza, Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia, Notre Dame RB Jeremiyah Love and Ohio State QB Julian Sayin were named finalists for the Heisman Trophy. Mendoza is the heavy betting favorite to win the award.

    ⚾️ MLB Draft Lottery: The White Sox (27.7%), Twins (22.2%), Pirates (16.8%), Orioles (9.2%) and Athletics (6.6%) have the best odds of landing the No. 1 pick in tonight’s MLB Draft Lottery, which airs at 5:30pm ET on MLB Network.

    🏈 Rivers eyes return: The Colts are hosting Philip Rivers for a workout today after Daniel Jones’ season-ending injury. Rivers, 44, hasn’t played since the 2020 season, when he led Indianapolis to an 11-5 record and a playoff berth.

    🏀 The magical Week 6 AP poll

    (Davis Long/Yahoo Sports)

    (Davis Long/Yahoo Sports)

    It’s only December, but history tells us we already know who will be cutting down the nets in April: one of the top 12 teams above.

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    The streak: The past 21 men’s basketball national champions (and 35 of the past 36) were all ranked in the top 12 of the Week 6 AP poll during their title-winning seasons.

    • 2024-25: Florida (Week 6 rank: 9)

    By the numbers: During the streak, the average Week 6 ranking of the eventual national champion has been 4.9. No other week has been a better barometer; not even the final AP poll before the NCAA tournament, where the soon-to-be champs had an average ranking of 5.5.

    From Yahoo Sports’ Jeff Eisenberg:

    It’s easy to explain why the Week 6 poll is more predictive than the Week 1-5 iterations. By early December, most high-majors have played at least a few games against fellow power-conference programs. There is more data available to help separate contenders and pretenders than there previously was in November.

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    The more vexing question is why the Week 6 poll has proven more reliable than AP voters’ late-season evaluations. In theory, three more months of games should provide a richer understanding of which teams are truly elite. In reality, many of the teams that prove themselves national-championship caliber in November and December never drop out of the AP top 10 the rest of the season.

    The most recent outliers: The last national champion that didn’t crack the top 12 in Week 6 was Carmelo Anthony’s 2002-03 Syracuse squad, which wasn’t even ranked until mid-January. Before that, you have to go all the way back to Danny Manning’s 1987-88 Kansas team (aka. “Danny and the Miracles”), which entered the tournament with 11 losses and unexpectedly won the title as a No. 6 seed.

    Looking ahead: Who’s the most likely team to defy 20-plus years of history? BetMGM lists No. 18 Florida and No. 19 Kansas among its dozen national title favorites, and No. 13 Illinois, No. 14 UNC, No. 17 Arkansas and No. 22 St. John’s aren’t far behind.

    🏈 Every bowl game, ranked

    (Bruno Rouby/Yahoo Sports)

    (Bruno Rouby/Yahoo Sports)

    Bowl season ain’t what it used to be, to put it kindly. The increased emphasis on the CFP has made these games feel like glorified exhibitions, and numerous teams (including Notre Dame, Iowa State and Auburn) have opted out. But that didn’t stop us from ranking them all anyway.

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    Every bowl game, ranked: Below are the 35 bowls being played from Dec. 13 to Jan. 2 (not including first-round playoff games), ranked from best to worst.

    1. Citrus Bowl: No. 13 Texas vs. No. 18 Michigan (Dec. 31)

    2. ReliaQuest Bowl: No. 14 Vanderbilt vs. No. 23 Iowa (Dec. 31)

    3. Pop-Tarts Bowl: No. 12 BYU vs. No. 22 Georgia Tech (Dec. 27)

    4. Gator Bowl: No. 19 Virginia vs. Missouri (Dec. 27)

    5. Music City Bowl: Illinois vs. Tennessee (Dec. 30)

    6. Alamo Bowl: No. 16 USC vs. TCU (Dec. 30)

    7. Sun Bowl: Arizona State vs. Duke (Dec. 31)

    8. LA Bowl: Boise State vs. Washington (Dec. 13)

    9. Holiday Bowl: No. 17 Arizona vs. SMU (Jan. 2)

    10. New Mexico Bowl: No. 25 North Texas vs. San Diego State (Dec. 27)

    11-20: Liberty Bowl (Navy vs. Cincinnati); Texas Bowl (No. 21 Houston vs. LSU); Rate Bowl (New Mexico vs. Minnesota); Cure Bowl (ODU vs. South Florida); Frisco Bowl (UNLV vs. Ohio); Myrtle Beach Bowl (Kennesaw State vs. Western Michigan); Hawaii Bowl (Cal vs. Hawaii); IS4S Salute to Veterans Bowl (Troy vs. Jacksonville State); Fenway Bowl (Army vs. UConn); Pinstripe Bowl (Penn State vs. Clemson)

    21-30: Military Bowl (Pitt vs. ECU); Boca Raton Bowl (Louisville vs. Toledo); Gasparilla Bowl (NC State vs. Memphis); Las Vegas Bowl (No. 15 Utah vs. Nebraska); Snoop Dogg Arizona Bowl (Miami-Ohio vs. Fresno State); Potato Bowl (Washington State vs. Utah State); GameAbove Sports Bowl (Central Michigan vs. Northwestern); New Orleans Bowl (Southern Miss vs. WKU); Duke’s Mayo Bowl (Wake Forest vs. Mississippi State); Xbox Bowl (Missouri State vs. Arkansas State)

    31-35: 68 Ventures Bowl (Louisiana vs. Delaware); First Responder Bowl (FIU vs. UTSA); Independence Bowl (Coastal Carolina vs. Louisiana Tech); Birmingham Bowl (App State vs. Georgia Southern); Armed Forces Bowl (Rice vs. Texas State)

    ⚽️ Water breaks are coming to the World Cup

    Bayern Munich's Sacha Boey takes a water break during the Club World Cup. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

    Bayern Munich’s Sacha Boey takes a water break during the Club World Cup. (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images)

    To combat the heat of a North American summer, the 2026 World Cup will feature something new: water breaks.

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    Stay hydrated: Every game will include three-minute “hydration breaks” at the 22-minute mark of each half, effectively breaking games into quarters. The clock will still run during these breaks, with three additional minutes added to each half’s stoppage time.

    • Last summer’s Club World Cup, also held in the U.S., featured similar breaks during matches played on exceptionally hot days. But at next summer’s World Cup, the breaks will be included in every game, regardless of temperature, “to ensure equal conditions for all teams.”

    • The schedule itself was also crafted with heat-related player safety in mind, with afternoon games earmarked for indoor stadiums or cities with temperate climates, while hotter locales will host most of their games in the evening.

    Between the lines: Player safety is the primary objective, but that’s not the only impact these breaks will have. For starters, broadcasters can sell six extra minutes of commercials per game. But they also provide coaches with two additional opportunities to speak with players, giving the best in-game tacticians a tangible advantage.

    Looking ahead: The World Cup kicks off in Mexico in 184 days (June 11), when the first of three opening ceremonies will be held at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City. The following day, two more will be staged ahead of the openers in Canada (BMO Field, Toronto) and the U.S. (SoFi Stadium, Los Angeles).

    🥊 Meet boxing’s “professional loser”

    (Henry Russell/Yahoo Sports)

    (Henry Russell/Yahoo Sports)

    In 101 pro fights across seven years, England’s Jake Pollard has lost 100 of them. Yet he not only survives, but thrives in a sport that quietly depends on men just like him. How?

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    From Uncrowned’s Lewis Watson:

    “People can call me what they like. B-side fighter, professional loser, scumbag, piece of s*** — I’ve had it all. And honestly? I couldn’t care less.”

    Jake Pollard says the words with conviction. The 33-year-old leans back and takes a slow sip of his lager. He smiles, revealing a gap where a tooth once sat on the right side of his mouth, and never once breaks eye contact.

    It’s a grey Thursday afternoon in West Yorkshire, and we’ve met in an uncomplicated pub in the heart of Bradford’s city center. Jake (1-100, 0 KOs) speaks to Uncrowned just a fortnight after his 101st professional fight and 100th professional defeat.

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    On October’s Joseph Parker vs. Fabio Wardley undercard at London’s O2 Arena, he was stopped for only the sixth time in his career — this time by rising prospect Hassan Ishaq (2-0, 2 KOs). The defeat itself didn’t surprise him; the attention that followed did.

    Broadcast live on DAZN, Jake’s performance — and the story behind it — struck a chord far beyond the usual diehards of the sport.

    “I guess it’s a weird concept for people to understand if they’re not in the game,” he concedes. “I try to explain my role as best I can. I’m there to turn up, test these prospects and see if they are any good or not. I’m that first rung on their ladder — but if they aren’t up to it, they will be quick to find out once I hit them!”

    “The away corner dressing room is like a community,” he says. “You know you’re all there expecting to lose, but you look out for each other and share stories.”

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    “Everyone in the hall or arena wants you to lose — they want to see you laid out on your back covered in blood. They’re sickos, really. So you feel a bit like a caged dog going into a dog fight. It’s only you and your coach that want the opposite.”

    Read the full story.

    📺 Watchlist: Tuesday, Dec. 9

    (Mert Alper Dervis/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    (Mert Alper Dervis/Anadolu via Getty Images)

    🏀 NBA Cup Quarterfinals

    The knockout round of the in-season tournament tips off with two Eastern Conference matchups. First up, the Magic host the Heat in a Sunshine State battle (6pm ET, Prime); then the Raptors, who’ve lost three straight, host the Knicks, who’ve won three straight (8:30pm).

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    🏀 Jimmy V Classic

    ESPN’s annual men’s basketball doubleheader honoring legendary coach Jim Valvano is tonight at Madison Square Garden. No. 10 BYU and Clemson square off in the first leg (6:30pm), followed by No. 5 UConn vs. No. 18 Florida (9pm) in a meeting of the last two national champions.

    More to watch:

    • 🏒 NHL: Golden Knights at Islanders (7pm, TNT); Avalanche at Predators (9:30pm, TNT) … Colorado (48 pts) is the best team in the league. Nashville (24 pts) is the worst.

    • ⚽️ Champions League: Inter Milan vs. Liverpool (3pm, Paramount+) … One of nine games to kick off Matchday 6.

    • ⚽️ Women’s Champions League: Real Madrid vs. Wolfsburg (3pm, Paramount+) … One of four games to kick off Matchday 5.

    Today’s full slate.

    🏈 CFP trivia

    (Yahoo Sports)

    (Yahoo Sports)

    Question: Do you know the nicknames of all 12 teams in this year’s College Football Playoff?

    The teams: Indiana, Ohio State, Georgia, Texas Tech, Oregon, Ole Miss, Texas A&M, Oklahoma, Alabama, Miami, Tulane, James Madison

    Answer at the bottom.

    📸 Photo finish

    (Freestyle Chess/Stev Bonhage)

    (Freestyle Chess/Stev Bonhage)

    🇿🇦 Cape Town, South Africa — Ahead of this week’s Freestyle Chess Grand Slam Tour Finals, grandmasters competed in an underwater competition, where American Hans Niemann emerged victorious.

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    Underwater chess: The competition was held in the Silo Hotel’s rooftop pool, where a chess set was placed at a depth of 3.5 feet. Each time a player surfaced after making a move, their opponent had to immediately dive down to make their own move.

    Trivia answer: Indiana Hoosiers, Ohio State Buckeyes, Georgia Bulldogs, Texas Tech Red Raiders, Oregon Ducks, Ole Miss Rebels, Texas A&M Aggies, Oklahoma Sooners, Alabama Crimson Tide, Miami Hurricanes, Tulane Green Wave, James Madison Dukes

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