Category: Sport

  • Fantasy Football Live! Watch Sunday for last-minute start/sit advice and rankings updates for Week 15

    Week 15 of the 2025 NFL season is here — and there’s no better place to get last-minute start-sit advice this Sunday than Fantasy Football Live.

    Our top-notch fantasy analysts will answer your lineup questions live during the 90-minute show, starting at 11:30 a.m. ET.

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    Yahoo Fantasy’s Matt Harmon, Justin Boone and Chris Allen join host Jason Fitz to guide you right up to kickoff of the 1 p.m. ET games. The crew will cover it all.

    Here’s what’s coming up on this week’s show:

    • Justin Boone’s live rankings updates

    • Top fantasy storylines:

      • Who looks best coming off the bye? (Drake Maye, Bryce Young, Brock Purdy)

      • Christian Watson facing tough matchup during hot streak

      • Will the Texans finally end Jacoby Brissett’s run?

    • Identifying matchup-proof players

    • Previewing some of the week’s key fantasy games:

      • Vikings vs. Cowboys on SNF

      • Dolphins vs. Steelers on MNF

    • Sharing our favorite player props for the week

    • And most importantly — answer YOUR lineup questions

    More Week 15 advice

    Rankings from each Yahoo Fantasy analyst

    Consensus Half-PPR Rankings

    Consensus PPR Rankings

    Looking for even more help on Sunday?

    We’ve got you covered:

    • Analyst Scott Pianowski will be answering start-sit questions on Twitter/X (@YahooFantasy) beginning at noon ET — just tag your questions with #AskFFL (consider it your fantasy Bat Signal).

    • Analyst Joel Smyth will also be live on TikTok at noon ET, ready to help with any last-minute decisions.

    Where and when to watch FFL

    Catch Fantasy Football Live on YahooSports.com, the Yahoo Sports app, the Yahoo Fantasy app or YouTube, starting at 11:30 a.m. ET on Sunday.

    Use #AskFFL on Twitter/X and join the conversation.

  • NBA Cup 2025: 8 takes on Knicks-Magic and Spurs-Thunder, plus our championship predictions

    The 2025 NBA Cup semifinals stage is set: Knicks-Magic and Spurs-Thunder. The final four will face off Saturday in Las Vegas, with the winners advancing to the title game on Tuesday. Adding to the festivities, Victor Wembanyama is likely to make his return from a calf injury. Can anyone keep the Thunder from lifting another trophy? Our writers weigh in.

    What’s your take on Knicks-Magic?

    Ben Rohrbach: A potential Eastern Conference finals preview. The Knicks own the East’s best net rating (+8.6), and the Magic (+4.2) are not far behind, despite missing Paolo Banchero and now Franz Wagner for chunks of another season. Banchero is back and helped Orlando oust Miami from the Cup quarterfinals. Is he enough? Not against the Knicks, whose best lineup (Jalen Brunson, Josh Hart, Mikal Bridges, OG Anunoby and Karl-Anthony Towns) is walloping teams. But with both Banchero and Wagner? These two teams could meet again in a big playoff series.

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    Steve Jones: The Magic will need to find an answer for Brunson, who has given them 30 or more every time he has seen them this season. The Knicks are at their best when they play with tempo and flow in the half-court. The Magic have worked to be physical to take that away and get the Knicks deeper in the shot clock. Their best moments come when their defense matches their desire to push and attack quickly. Considering these two teams will have faced each other on three of the last four weekends and twice in a span of six days, I am intrigued to see how much familiarity comes into play.

    Tom Haberstroh: It’s going to be a bloodbath. Both teams are monsters on the boards, so prepare for some serious physicality underneath. I wouldn’t be surprised if things get out of hand a few times. With six-figure bonuses already in hand for getting this far in the NBA Cup, I imagine the players won’t stress too much about flagrant 2s and techs that carry $2,000 fines.

    Dan Devine: Wagner’s absence means the game could come down to how effectively New York can limit Desmond Bane. In their win over the Magic last Sunday, the Knicks held Bane to 16 points on 15 shot attempts, with Mikal Bridges taking the bulk of the defensive assignment. The story was dramatically different for Orlando in their quarterfinals win, though. The Magic had their third-best half-court outing of the season against the Heat, fueled by Bane’s 37 points on 24 shots. If Bridges and Co. can keep Bane under wraps, Orlando could struggle to match the firepower of the Knicks’ No. 2-ranked offense. If he gets loose, the Magic could have enough juice to make it to the championship round.

    What’s your take on Spurs-Thunder?

    Devine: At the risk of being extremely basic: I’m really, really glad Victor Wembanyama is healthy enough to play. Hardly anybody has made Oklahoma City feel uncomfortable throughout its historic rampage to a 24-1 record. Well, a 7-foot-whatever ambulatory eclipse has a way of unsettling an offense: Just 27.2% of San Antonio opponents’ shot attempts have come at the basket with Wembanyama on the floor, which would be the second-lowest mark in the NBA over the course of the season.

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    This one had a chance to be fun even if the Spurs kept Wembanyama out, with De’Aaron Fox, Stephon Castle, Dylan Harper and Devin Vassell profiling as an awfully fun perimeter quartet to throw out against the Thunder’s phalanx of monster defensive wings. But to make the Thunder sweat, let alone beat them, you need a trump card — a bona fide game-changing difference-maker. The Spurs have one of those guys. And we’re going to get to see him. Hell yeah.

    Haberstroh: I’m torn! On one hand, I can’t wait to see Big Vic and Chet go at it and build on a much-needed heavyweight (OK, maybe not heavy heavy) rivalry in the West. But this will be Wembanyama’s first game back after a month off and I’d hate to see him aggravate the calf strain under the Vegas lights. Then again, OKC has been so dominant that Wemby might not matter.

    Jones: In a basketball world that is wondering what to do with this Thunder team, it’s hard not to ponder what this Victor Wembanyama would look like against them. It’s been a testament to what the Spurs have built that they have gone 9-3 in his absence. The strength has been movement and the play of Fox, Castle and Harper. That strength will be tested against an OKC defense that has thrived by speeding offenses up, being physical against drives and flying around to create havoc. Sounds like a fun battle to me.

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    Rohrbach: Getting to watch Wemby in his first NBA game with real stakes — against arguably the greatest team in basketball history — is absolutely must-watch television for all sports fans. It may not make a lick of difference against a Thunder team that looks unbeatable, but Wembanyama gave the French national team a shot against the U.S. in the 2024 Olympics, and he could do the same for San Antonio.

    Who will be this year’s NBA Cup champ?

    Jones: Thunder. My favorite part about the NBA Cup is tapping into the competitive nature of the early part of the season. I’m excited to see this version of the Spurs against the Thunder, what the Magic would throw at OKC’s offense, or how the Knicks’ offense would hold up against OKC’s defense. It should be some fun, competitive basketball. But I am going with the Thunder to roll.

    Haberstroh: Thunder. I’ll take the team that is 24-1 and the only one who has been to the NBA Cup final before. They’re pretty good. The 3-point-heavy Knicks could give OKC problems if they go on a heater, but they need to top Orlando first.

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    Rohrbach: Thunder. I would be crazy to pick anyone but them. They are 24-1, losing only a 22-point lead to the Trail Blazers on Nov. 5, and they own the best net rating (+17.2) in NBA history. They do not lose games. If they are giving a full effort, and they always do, they are better than a Spurs team that is just welcoming Wembanyama back into the fold, a Knicks team that has defensive limitations, given the presence of Brunson and Towns, and a Magic team that is without Wagner.

    Devine: Thunder. I’m not saying they can’t be beat. I’m just saying that I’ll let someone else pick that outcome until I see it actually happen more than once in two months.

  • Dodgers get richer, add closer Edwin Díaz on record-setting 3-year, $69 million deal

    One of the top relievers in baseball is joining the defending champions.

    Former New York Mets closer Edwin Díaz signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers this week for three years and $69 million. The deal sets a record for average annual value for reliever contracts.

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    Because Díaz rejected a one-year, $22.025 million qualifying offer, the Mets will receive a compensation pick after the fourth round of the 2026 MLB Draft. The Dodgers will lose their second- and fifth-highest selections in the draft and $1 million from their international bonus pool, per MLB Pipeline.

    [Get more Dodgers news: L.A. team feed]

    Díaz was easily the top arm on the bullpen market this offseason, ranking No. 11 on Yahoo Sports’ list of top 50 free agents, 16 places ahead of the next reliever. That reliever happens to be Devin Williams, whom the Mets gave three years and $51 million last week and who will now replace Díaz.

    The 31-year-old Díaz opted out of the remaining two years and $37 million on his Mets contract in early November, setting him up to enter free agency after winning NL Reliever of the Year honors for the second time of his career.

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    Soon after opting out, Díaz bluntly put his odds of returning to the Mets at 50/50. We now know how that worked out.

    The Dodgers add the market’s top arm to an iffy bullpen

    Despite winning the World Series, the Dodgers’ bullpen was an expensive problem in 2025. Their solution is apparently to make it even more expensive.

    Closing out games wasn’t supposed to be a problem for the club after they handed a total of $111 million to Tanner Scott, Blake Treinen and Kirby Yates, with Scott receiving the bulk of that money at four years and $72 million. It was a prime example of intentional overkill, a rich team spending big because it could.

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    Then all three pitchers turned in some of the worst seasons of their careers.

    By the World Series, Yates was out for the season due to injury, and the Dodgers had decided Scott wouldn’t come back from a surprise abscess excision in his lower body. Treinen still being in the mix was a head-scratcher — he had a 6.75 ERA in the playoffs — and his use basically boiled down to the Dodgers having zero solid options.

    Scott and Treinen remain under contract for next year, with potential late-inning contributors Anthony Banda, Alex Vesia, Brock Stewart and Brusdar Graterol all still in the L.A. bullpen behind a dominant rotation.

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    With another ring in hand, the Dodgers clearly didn’t want a repeat of the 2025 playoffs, so they spent even more to land the reliever every team wished it had in 2025. But of course, Díaz isn’t without his red flags.

    What will the Dodgers get from Edwin Díaz?

    Among pitchers with at least 50 innings in 2025, Díaz led the NL in ERA (1.63) and strikeout rate (38%), as well as numerous ERA predictors such as FIP (2.28), xFIP (2.49) and SIERA (2.18). He also ranked a close second in WHIP (0.87) and batting average against (.162). Simply put, he was dominant, and every number under surface level backed up what fans were seeing.

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    That made opting out of what had previously been the largest reliever contract in MLB history — five years, $102 million — an easy decision for Díaz. However, the Mets’ return for that money also reflects the risks of giving relievers huge paydays.

    The Mets got an incredible year from Díaz in 2025. In 2024, they got an iffy year in which he blew seven saves, lost his closer role and posted a 3.52 ERA while dealing with a shoulder impingement. In 2023, they got nothing because Díaz blew out his patellar tendon while celebrating a win with his Puerto Rican teammates in the World Baseball Classic before the MLB season even began.

    Three seasons: one good, one bad, one ugly. And now Díaz is three years older, which only increases the risk at an infamously risky position.

    However, you could argue that WBC injury was a freak accident and that 2025 showed Díaz has fully overcome what was ailing him in 2024. When the potential reward is what Díaz did in 2025 or in 2022, when he won his other NL Reliever of the Year award, contenders will pay big money to have a pitcher like him on the mound to close out a playoff game.

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    What else could the Dodgers do?

    Díaz is a significant get for the Dodgers, but their offseason is by no means complete. With their bullpen crowded and their rotation already elite, any other major move would likely come in the lineup, specifically the outfield.

    The team’s Opening Day outfield currently works out to something like Andy Pages or Tommy Edman in center field, Teoscar Hernández in right field and some mix of Alex Call or Ryan Ward in left.

    All of those options present some reason for concern. Pages just posted one of the worst postseasons in the history of baseball, eventually getting benched in the World Series. He was good in the regular season, but will face questions in 2026. Hernández has delivered clutch hits in two years with L.A., but has had enough defensive issues in right that a move to left field seems warranted. There has also been plenty of trade chatter around him this offseason.

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    Edman is recovering from a recent ankle surgery and might not be able to handle center field. Call is best used as the right-handed side of a platoon. Ward has raked in Triple-A but has no MLB experience and isn’t a top prospect.

    So be ready for the Dodgers to make a significant move somewhere in the outfield. Because this team is making it clear they aren’t going to settle in an area where improvements are available.

  • Ex-Michigan coach Sherrone Moore charged with felony home invasion, released on bond

    Former Michigan coach Sherrone Moore was charged Friday with third-degree home invasion, stalking, and breaking and entering or entering without breaking after his detainment on Wednesday. He was later released on $25,000 bond, with his next hearing set for Jan. 22, 2026.

    Moore was detained by police in Saline, Michigan, on Wednesday, hours after he was fired for cause by Michigan after the school said it had found evidence of an inappropriate relationship with a staffer.

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    The home invasion charge is a felony punishable by up to five years in prison and a $2,000 fine. The stalking and breaking entering charges are misdemeanors, punishable by up to one year in jail and a $1,000 fine, and up to 90 days in jail and a $500 fine, respectively.

    During the arraignment, the prosecutor said that Moore and the victim, who called police on Wednesday, had an intimate relationship for several years: “Our victim broke up with the defendant on Monday morning. She presented herself to [the school] and corroborated the fact they had a relationship.”

    The prosecutor said Moore grabbed butter knives and kitchen scissors at the woman’s house, threatened to take his own life, and that his blood was on her hands because “you ruined my life.”

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    Moore’s attorney, Joseph Simon, said, “My client [Sherrone Moore] is 39 years old, zero prior criminal history, zero contact with the criminal justice system … there’s no evidence to suggest he’s a threat to public safety.”

    Moore’s attorney also clarified that Moore had been taken to a mental health facility “for evaluation,” but was turned back over to law enforcement.

    According to the Wall Street Journal on Friday, Michigan received a tip in October that Moore had been in a relationship with a staffer, though both Moore and the woman denied they had a relationship as Michigan investigated. However, the school still hired an outside law firm to further investigate. On Wednesday, per the WSJ, the woman told the firm that she had a relationship with Moore for approximately two years until 2024 and “there were email, text and phone records to prove it.”

    On Thursday, Michigan president Domenico Grasso said that the school’s investigation into Moore was still ongoing.

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    “When the findings of a university investigation into Coach Moore’s behavior were presented on Wednesday, we immediately terminated his employment,” Grasso wrote in a letter to the university.

    “There is absolutely no tolerance for this conduct at the University of Michigan. None.”

    Moore had been Michigan’s offensive coordinator under previous coach Jim Harbaugh and served as the team’s interim coach at two different points in the 2023 season when Harbaugh was suspended. Moore was then promoted to take over for Harbaugh ahead of the 2024 season. Over two seasons with Moore in charge, Michigan went 17-8.

    After Moore’s firing, Michigan said associate head coach Biff Poggi will be the team’s interim coach for the Citrus Bowl against Texas.

  • NBA Cup Semifinals Preview + Quarterfinals Recap

    Subscribe to The Dunker Spot

    Ahead of this weekend’s NBA Cup slate, Nekias Duncan and Steve Jones recap how the Magic, Knicks, Thunder and Spurs earned victories in the quarterfinals.

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    Then, the guys preview the semifinals — Knicks-Magic and Spurs-Thunder — asking and answering big picture questions about each matchup.

    If you ever have NBA or WNBA questions, email us at dunkerspot@yahoo.com.

    (1:22) — Heat-Magic

    (13:08) — Knicks-Raptors

    (20:25) — Suns-Thunder

    (27:31) — Lakers-Spurs

    (35:55) — Knicks-Magic preview

    (51:52) — Spurs-Thunder preview

    Desmond Bane scored 37 points to lead the Orlando Magic in a win over the Miami Heat. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images)

    Desmond Bane scored 37 points to lead the Orlando Magic in a win over the Miami Heat. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images)

    (Photo by Ishika Samant/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 yahoosports.tv

  • Josh Allen and Hailee Steinfield announce they’re expecting their first child

    Josh Allen and Hailee Steinfeld are expecting their first child together, the couple announced Friday.

    Steinfeld first tipped off fans via her Substack, listing 29 moments she enjoyed this year as she reaches her 29th birthday. The final point was a video, in which she and Allen celebrated the child to come, with him kissing her stomach and her wearing a shirt that reads “Mother.”

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    The video was soon shared to their Instagrams.

    The Buffalo Bills quarterback and movie star have been together since 2023. They got engaged in 2024 and married earlier this year, in a ceremony in Ventura, California.

    Just last month, Steinfeld responded “Of course” when asked in an interview with Bustle if she was thinking about having children with Allen. In the same interview, she discussed the impact Allen has had in her life:

    “That inner peace that you have, that rock, that solid, consistent part of your life is indescribable. I literally thank God every day that I found my person, and it’s the greatest thing in the world. Life makes sense. Everything makes sense. I feel like I am stepping into the version that I’ve always dreamed of being, having so much to do with being with him.”

    Both members of the couple have been busy this year, with Steinfeld playing a starring role in Ryan Coogler’s “Sinners,” with other projects to come such as her voice role in “Spider-Man: Beyond the Spider-Verse.”

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    Allen, the reigning NFL MVP, has led the Bills to a 9-4 record with 3,083 passing yards, a career-high 70.1% completion rate, 22 passing touchdowns, 10 interceptions, 487 rushing yards and 12 rushing touchdowns. They currently sit two games back from the New England Patriots in the AFC East and hold a wild-card spot.

  • Edwin Díaz confirms he’s bringing iconic Timmy Trumpet intro with him to Dodgers

    Edwin Díaz is bringing one of baseball’s most iconic entrances with him to the Los Angeles Dodgers.

    The Dodgers introduced their new closer on Friday, three days after landing the former New York Mets star on a three-year, $69 million contract in free agency. It was inevitable that Díaz would be asked about his entrance music, which for the past few years has been “Narco” by Timmy Trumpet.

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    He confirmed that he plans to use the same song at Dodger Stadium:

    “It would be fun. I think that music will get into the fans right away. That’s a nice walk-up song, so I can’t wait to, first game of the season, come in the ninth with Timmy Trumpet and get the W for the Dodgers.”

    In case you need a refresher on the kind of spectacle we’re talking about:

    It’s not a surprise that Díaz will continue to use that music, but it is yet another twist of the knife for a Mets fan base that hasn’t really enjoyed the offseason so far. The team did sign former New York Yankees reliever Devin Williams as its new closer, but Díaz was a popular player and, by most measures, the best reliever in baseball in 2025.

    So expect quite a few Mets fans to look away the first time Dave Roberts calls for Díaz in the ninth inning.

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    During his Dodgers introduction, Díaz also confirmed that he will switch from No. 39 to No. 3 with the Dodgers, as 39 is a retired number for L.A. in honor of Hall of Fame catcher Roy Campanella. Díaz said he chose No. 3 because of his three children. He also said his brother Alexis, who played for the Dodgers last year, gave a strong endorsement for the Dodgers’ culture.

    The Dodgers signed Díaz after a nearly disastrous year for their bullpen, with some of their top arms faltering again and again in big spots. The club invested $111 million in contracts for Tanner Scott, Blake Treinen and Kirby Yates last winter, but none of them was a reliable option in the playoffs, if they pitched at all. Díaz figures to be a much more straightforward choice in the ninth inning.

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    Almost simultaneously with the Díaz conference, the Baltimore Orioles introduced Pete Alonso on Friday after signing him to a five-year, $155 million contract. Losing both players in the same week has been frustrating for Mets fans, to say the least — to the point that Mets owner Steve Cohen urged them to remember there’s still plenty of offseason left for the club to do something.

  • Blue Jays’ shopping spree continues with reliever Tyler Rogers on 3-year, $37 million deal

    The Toronto Blue Jays are spending like they want to reach the World Series again.

    The club has agreed to a three-year, $37 million deal with free-agent reliever Tyler Rogers, according to The Athletic’s Ken Rosenthal. The deal reportedly includes a vesting option that would increase its value to $48 million.

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    Known for his funky submarine delivery, Rogers split last season between the San Francisco Giants and New York Mets. The former dealt him to the latter at the trade deadline, which didn’t stop him from leading the NL in appearances by a pitcher for the fourth time in six years.

    Rogers has been a dependable option throughout his career, holding a career 2.76 ERA, and his delivery is effective against both righties and lefties. Neither side of the plate has a career OPS better than .650 against him.

    Signing Rogers potentially opens a door to signing his twin brother, Taylor, who is similarly effective from the left side and also a free agent. The two played together for two seasons on the Giants.

    It has been a busy offseason for the Blue Jays, who finished two outs short of a World Series title in November and have been throwing around their large-market muscle so far this winter.

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    The Jays executed the first big-time deal of the winter with former San Diego Padres starter Dylan Cease on a seven-year, $210 million contract, then added another starter to their rotation with Cody Ponce after his MVP season in South Korea.

    The same day they signed Rogers, they also announced a five-year extension for president of baseball operations Mark Shapiro. Never say reaching a World Series isn’t good for your job security (unless you work for the Houston Astros).

    Including Rogers, Toronto has now spent $277 million guaranteed on three arms, with plenty of offseason to go. Star infielder Bo Bichette remains a free agent they would like to have, and they are reportedly strong contenders for the offseason’s biggest free agent, Kyle Tucker.

  • Big 12 nearing private capital deal that could raise up to $500 million

    The Big 12 is nearing an agreement with RedBird and Weatherford Capital for a cash infusion of millions.

    Big 12 presidents and chancellors recently authorized commissioner Brett Yormark to take another step toward finalizing a credit deal that, if all schools choose to participate, would deliver $500 million to Big 12 members and create a strategic business partnership with the firms.

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    Multiple people with knowledge of the agreement spoke to Yahoo Sports under condition of anonymity. The Big 12 is not giving up any stake or equity to the firms. A final decision on the move is expected in the coming weeks after the completion of long-form agreements.

    In a statement to Yahoo Sports, the Big 12 confirmed that the league is in negotiations with the two firms to “create a multifaceted strategic business partnership” focused on growing commercial operations of the league, while also “providing an opt-in capital solution for our member institutions to take advantage of up to $500 million of capital.”

    “RedBird will also work with the Conference to identify complementary investment opportunities inside and outside of the collegiate athletics ecosystem that will create new revenue streams and long-term asset appreciation,” the statement said.

    The agreement would end the conference’s more than three years of exploration into private equity and capital, and it would become the first publicized conference-wide capital agreement in major college sports. The Big 12’s deal with RedBird and Weatherford closely follows the finalization of an equity partnership that one of the league’s members, Utah, struck earlier this week. The agreement would not impact Utah’s deal.

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    The Big 12’s RedBird/Weatherford partnership, spearheaded by Yormark and Kansas president Doug Girod, the league’s chair, is a three-prong package that is described as a “low-risk venture with tremendous upside for the league,” said one stakeholder.

    Redbird, a New York-based investment management firm with $12 billion in assets, has agreed to infuse millions into the Big 12 office as an initial step to help drive commercial business, perhaps even create new businesses and lead to the league’s investment in revenue-generating companies.

    The firm is also offering roughly $30 million to each member school in a capital credit line at a reduced rate. Schools are not required to accept the capital.

    At the center of the third part of the package is a strategic business relationship between the firms and the Big 12 in an effort to further evolve the conference office in a more professionalized environment. The Big 12 used Moelis as its banker in the process.

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    “To date, the RedBird ecosystem has delivered over $145 million of contracted revenue to the Big 12 and its member institutions,” the Big 12 statement said. “This partnership would provide the Conference with a world-class strategic and capital partner, while preserving 100% of the member institutions’ equity in the Big 12.”

    The partnership between the Big 12 and RedBird/Weatherford would resolve more than a year of negotiations between the entities over a capital deal and delivers to the firm its long-awaited attempt to enter the college sports sphere. For months now, RedBird and Weatherford have pitched equity or capital proposals to individual schools.

    Private equity or capital has emerged within an industry that finds itself in its most financially stressful era. With budgets expanding to pay college athletes and coaching salaries continuing to balloon, schools and conferences are searching for upfront dollars that they plan to pay back over a matter of years — much of the cash contingent on future television contracts.

    Utah became the first school to strike such a deal in an equity agreement with Otro Capital, but the Utes are unlikely to be the last. Several power programs across the country are seriously considering similar plans.

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    In one of the more publicized proposals, the Big Ten negotiated for months an equity and capital partnership with UC Investments only to see the deal paused as two members, USC and Michigan, opposed the plan. Months ago, the SEC began working with investment banker Goldman Sachs in an effort to explore potential partnerships, even though the league’s presidents have publicly and privately expressed their resistance to such deals.

    However, the amount of cash involved cannot be ignored.

    These capital infusions pose a threat for those not taking the money. Those without capital dollars risk being placed at a financial disadvantage, potentially in the recruitment of both athletes and coaching staff members.

    Big 12 and ACC schools are already at a disadvantage financially from the SEC and Big Ten, whose television contracts — the largest revenue driver for college programs — distribute more cash to their schools. The capital infusion helps the Big 12 close a gap that continues to widen between the league and what many have deemed the “Power Two” of the SEC and Big Ten.

  • Austin Reaves out at least a week for Lakers with calf strain

    Austin Reaves’ breakout season is going to be paused for at least seven days.

    The Los Angeles Lakers guard is out with a mild left calf strain and will be re-evaluated in one week, according to team reporter Mike Trudell.

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    L.A. has two games in the next week: road games against the Phoenix Suns on Sunday and Utah Jazz on Tuesday. If Reaves is not ready to return in the minimum timeframe, he would miss a game against the Los Angeles Clippers next Saturday as well.

    The Lakers’ season has mostly been defined by outrageous numbers for Luka Dončić and, until recently, the absence of LeBron James, but Reaves has made a strong case as a true star in 21 games. He’s averaging career highs across the board with 27.9 points, 6.7 assists and 5.6 rebounds per game, and he’s actually the team leader in win shares according to Basketball Reference.

    He set a career high in points with 51 in October, while Dončić and James were both absent.

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    Those contributions have helped the Lakers begin the season with a 17-7 record, tied for fourth in the Western Conference. However, they came up short in NBA Cup action Wednesday with a 132-119 loss to the San Antonio Spurs.