Category: Sport

  • NFL conference championships against-the-spread picks, predictions for every game: Super Bowl LX bids at stake

    The conference championship round doesn’t have Josh Allen, and we knew it wouldn’t have Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson, Joe Burrow and some other star quarterbacks, but it does feature four very good, well-coached teams.

    The Seattle Seahawks, Denver Broncos and New England Patriots all went 14-3 in the regular season. The Los Angeles Rams were 12-5 and might be the best team out of the four. Nobody snuck into the NFL’s final four this season. This a good group of teams for what is annually one of the best weekends of football on the calendar.

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    Here are the picks for the NFL’s conference championship games, with odds from BetMGM:

    Broncos (+5) over Patriots

    No matter which side you’re on, and what you think of Jarrett Stidham as he takes over for an injured Bo Nix, everyone should agree that this point spread is an overreaction.

    Jarrett Stidham's fifth career start will come in the AFC championship game. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images)

    Jarrett Stidham’s fifth career start will come in the AFC championship game. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images)

    (Tim Warner via Getty Images)

    Before the season, when Yahoo Sports’ Ben Fawkes polled 12 oddsmakers to determine the difference in the point spread between each team’s starter and backup, the average for Nix to Stidham was 3.85 points. Last week, when some books posted lookahead lines to potential conference championship matchups, the Broncos were a 1.5-point favorite over the Patriots. This line has shifted 6.5 points from that lookahead line after the Nix injury. Nothing has changed other than the quarterbacks, and we already knew that switch should be worth less than four points.

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    Stidham hasn’t thrown a pass in the past two regular seasons, but the Broncos obviously like him. He was a priority signing for Denver in 2023 during its first offseason with Sean Payton. He got $10 million over two years, which isn’t bad money for a backup. In 2025, when he was a free agent again, he got $12 million over two seasons. Denver likes Stidham, he just hasn’t had to play. In Stidham’s first NFL start, as a member of the Raiders at the end of the 2022 season, he threw for 365 yards and three touchdowns against a 49ers defense that made an NFC championship game. In Stidham’s last regular-season start at the end of the 2023 season, he had a respectable 272 yards and a touchdown. This past preseason Stidham was 30 of 38 for 376 yards, four touchdowns and no interceptions. This isn’t the preseason, and he won’t be facing defensive players about to get cut, but Stidham isn’t a zero. The Broncos also aren’t a quarterback-centric team. They got here by winning with defense and Sean Payton managing close games late, with Nix making a few plays when needed. Nix hasn’t been bad this season, but it’s also not the Chiefs trying to replace Patrick Mahomes.

    [Check out all of Yahoo’s sports betting content here in our betting hub]

    The Patriots are a good team but have also caught breaks, particularly with their oft-mentioned soft schedule. Playoff wins against the Chargers and Texans were impressive. Drake Maye is already one of the NFL’s best quarterbacks, and the defense has gotten even better in the playoffs. New England could blow out a Denver team, especially if Stidham looks rusty after not throwing a pass in either of the past two regular seasons. But this might not be the easy out that some seem to believe it will be.

    Rams (+2.5) over Seahawks

    It’s fairly rare for an NFL favorite to win and not cover the spread, especially with a small spread. However, that happened in both Rams-Seahawks meetings this regular season. In the first meeting the Rams won 21-19 as a 3-point favorite. In the rematch, the Seahawks had an amazing comeback and won 38-37 as a 1.5-point favorite.

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    It seems likely we get another close game to close the trilogy.

    Another oddity from the two regular-season meetings is that the losing team completely out-gained the winning team both times. In the Seahawks’ loss, they had 414 yards compared to only 249 for the Rams. In the Rams’ loss, they had 581 yards and Seattle had 415. The Rams blew that game, but the Seahawks should feel like they would have won the first meeting if Sam Darnold threw only two or three interceptions instead of four.

    It’s a great matchup and almost impossible to pick one team over the other. Rams defensive coordinator Chris Shula has had Sam Darnold’s number for most of the last three meetings, but Darnold ended up making many plays to lead Seattle to an overtime win in Week 16. Darnold also has an oblique injury that has been largely forgotten about. Darnold had to throw only 17 times in a blowout win last week over the 49ers, so we don’t know if he’s fully healthy. That’s in the Rams’ favor. But Seattle is the team with much more rest over the last two weeks, with a bye and an easy divisional round win. Both of the Rams’ wins the last two weeks came down to the end. Seattle also has a great home-field advantage at Lumen Field, which is one of the loudest outdoor venues in sports. There are good arguments to side for either team.

    If we’re taking a side in a difficult game to pick, it seems wise to take the points. We might even get a third instance of a team winning but not covering a small spread.

    Last week: 3-1

    Playoffs: 5-5

    Season to date: 139-136-7

  • NFL MVP: Josh Allen, Matthew Stafford, Drake Maye among finalists for 2025 AP award

    Josh Allen of the Buffalo Bills, Trevor Lawrence of the Jacksonville Jaguars, Drake Maye of the New England Patriots, Christian McCaffrey of the San Francisco 49ers and Matthew Stafford of the Los Angeles Rams have been voted the five finalists for the 2025 NFL Associated Press Most Valuable Player award.

    Allen is the only finalist to have been voted an MVP, taking home the award last season. He played 17 games for the Bills this season, throwing for 3,668 yards, 25 touchdowns and a career-high 69.3 completion percentage while also rushing for 579 yards and 14 touchdowns to lead the team to its seventh straight playoff appearance.

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    Lawrence nearly doubled his passing yards total from 2024 with 4,007 yards and a career-high 29 touchdowns as the Jaguars won the AFC South and made the playoffs for the first time since 2022.

    The Patriots’ revival led to a 14-3 record, and their first AFC East crown since 2019 was in large part because of the play of Maye. The second-year quarterback posted career numbers across the board with 4,394 passing yards, 31 touchdowns and an NFL-best completion percentage (72%) and 113.5 passer rating. He also rushed for 450 yards and four touchdowns.

    McCaffrey, who was a first-team All-Pro along with Stafford, recovered from an injury that derailed his 2024 season to play all 17 games for the 49ers in 2025. He rushed for 1,202 yards and 10 touchdowns and also caught 102 passes for 924 receiving yards and seven touchdowns as San Francisco finished with a 12-5 record and returned to the postseason.

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    No NFL quarterback had more passing yards (4,707) or passing touchdowns (46) than Stafford as the Rams finished with a 12-5 record in the touch NFC West. He was right behind Maye in passer rating (109.2) and was named a first-team All-Pro for the first time in his 17-season career. It was the first time Stafford had reached the 4,000-yard mark since 2021, his first season in L.A., and only the third time in his career he’s surpassed 40 passing touchdowns.

    Maye and McCaffrey were also voted finalists for Offensive Player of the Year, while the 49ers running back, along with Lawrence, is up for Comeback Player of the Year.

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    The NFL will announce its 2025 award winners during the “NFL Honors” show on Feb. 5, three days before Super Bowl LX.

    AP NFL award finalists

    Coach of the Year: Liam Coen, Jacksonville Jaguars; Ben Johnson, Chicago Bears; Mike Macdonald, Seattle Seahawks; Kyle Shanahan, San Francisco 49ers; Mike Vrabel, New England Patriots.

    Assistant Coach of the Year: Vic Fangio, Philadelphia Eagles (DC); Brian Flores, Minnesota Vikings (DC); Vance Joseph, Denver Broncos (DC); Klint Kubiak, Seattle Seahawks (OC); Josh McDaniels, New England Patriots (OC)

    Comeback Player of the Year: Stefon Diggs, New England Patriots; Aidan Hutchinson, Detroit Lions; Trevor Lawrence, Jacksonville Jaguars; Christian McCaffrey, San Francisco 49ers; Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys

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    Defensive Player of the Year: Will Anderson, Jr., Houston Texans; Nik Bonitto, Denver Broncos; Myles Garrett, Cleveland Browns; Aidan Hutchinson, Detroit Lions; Micah Parsons, Green Bay Packers

    Offensive Player of the Year: Drake Maye, New England Patriots; Christian McCaffrey, San Francisco 49ers; Puka Nacua, Los Angeles Rams; Bijan Robinson, Atlanta Falcons; Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Seattle Seahawks

    Offensive Rookie of the Year: Jaxson Dart, New York Giants; Emeka Egbuka, Tampa Bay Buccaneers; Treveyon Henderson, New England Patriots; Tetairoa McMillan, Carolina Panthers; Tyler Shough, New Orleans Saints

    Defensive Rookie of the Year: Abdul Carter, New York Giants; Nick Emmanwori, Seattle Seahawks; James Pearce, Jr., Atlanta Falcons; Carson Schwesinger, Cleveland Browns; Xavier Watts, Atlanta Falcons

  • Giannis Antetokounmpo says lack of chemistry, poor effort is driving Bucks’ struggles: ‘Guys are being selfish’

    Things haven’t gone well for the Milwaukee Bucks over the past few games. The team is just 1-4 since Jan. 11 and has lost those four contests by an average of nearly 19 points per game. Frustration is starting to seep in.

    Bucks superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo said as much following Wednesday’s 122-102 loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder. Antetokounmpo, who scored 19 points in the loss, blamed the team’s current stretch on myriad issues, including poor effort and selfish play, per ESPN.

    “We’re not playing hard,” Antetokounmpo said. “We aren’t doing the right thing. We’re not playing to win. We’re not playing together. Our chemistry’s not there. Guys are being selfish, trying to look for their own shots instead of looking for the right shot for the team. Guys trying to do it on their own.

    “At times, I feel like when we’re down 10, down 15, down 20, we try to make it up in one play, and it’s not going to work.”

    [More on the Bucks: Milwaukee team feed]

    That’s quite the laundry list of issues, though Antetokounmpo thinks he has one potential fix that could turn things around. Following the game, Antetokounmpo said he isn’t being given as many opportunities from teammates.

    “I’m not the guy that will yell and cuss his teammate out and demand the ball,” Antetokounmpo said. “I’ve never done that in my career. But I feel like I’ve played with teammates that kind of understand the gravity that I can cause for our team, in how I can create for teammates and for myself, and how I can help the team be more successful.

    “But maybe for some reason, I don’t understand — maybe because we’re young, maybe because we’re not playing well, maybe because guys think it’s their turn, they want to carry the team on their back and try to turn this around — but I really don’t get it. I really don’t.”

    While that could come off as a selfish statement, Antetokounmpo has seen limited field-goal attempts over the team’s last four games, reaching a high of just 13 during that stretch. Last season, Antetokounmpo averaged 19.7 field-goal attempts per contest. That figure is down to 16.5 this season.

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    That could partially explain why the Bucks are 18-25 halfway through the season. With the team struggling more than usual, there’s an argument to be made Antetokounmpo should get the ball more. If anyone can singlehandedly lead the team back into games, it’s Antetokounmpo.

    Some of the Bucks’ struggles this season were expected. Following numerous trades and signings over the past few years, the Bucks entered last offseason with less talent than usual, and fewer resources at their disposal. That led to rumors about Antetokounmpo’s future with the team. He’s remained committed to the team, but Wednesday’s comments show he’s clearly frustrated with the way things are going.

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    The Bucks still have a few weeks to bring in more talent. With the trade deadline fast approaching, Milwaukee could try and add another contributor to help Antetokounmpo. Based on Antetokounmpo’s comments Wednesday, the team may need to do something significant at the deadline, because the current situation doesn’t seem to be working for its star player.

  • Fantasy Football: Early look at the 2026 TE free agent class, including best landing spot for Travis Kelce, Kyle Pitts Sr.

    The 2025 fantasy football season has come and gone, but the offseason is just beginning. Fantasy analyst Joel Smyth will go over the potential TE moves in free agency that will drastically shift the fantasy outlook for 2026. Which tight ends can land in new and improved spots, and which teams are primed to bring in a new player?

    Early look at 2026 free agency

    Most Likely Teams to Sign a Free Agent TE

    1. Denver Broncos

    The Evan Engram experience didn’t pan out as expected for Sean Payton and the Denver offense. The Broncos TE ranked bottom-five in yards per target and will be 32 entering the second season of his two-year contract. The opening is still very desirable for an offense that led the NFL in passing attempts this season, especially when it is not close to a historical outlier when compared to past Payton teams. Without a dominant receiver core, the ceiling potential is sky high.

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    2. Washington Commanders

    ​​​Jayden Daniels’ sophomore season was a rough one in the shortened time he was on the field. With 35-year-old Zach Ertz as a free agent and second-year TE Ben Sinnott lacking production in the receiving game, the Commanders could be an interesting spot for a free agent TE. The TD upside with Daniels under center proved well for an aging Ertz, and can give plenty of upside to an incoming player.

    3. Tampa Bay Buccaneers

    With Cade Otton as an unrestricted free agent, Tampa Bay may look to upgrade under a new offensive coordinator. With such a deep WR core, the Buccaneers TE room has been limited when the Tampa Bay receivers are healthy. In a strong Buccaneers offense, a talented TE can be relevant in fantasy even with potentially lower volume.

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    4. Miami Dolphins

    New Dolphins head coach ​Jeff Hafley has yet to find his offensive play-caller in Miami, but a new style can bring more volume to the position. Even veteran TE Darren Waller found the majority of his success lined up out wide as a true receiver this past regular season. It may not be the most attractive landing spot, yet volume could outweigh the negatives.

    TEs Who Are Best Where They Are

    Kyle Pitts Sr., Falcons

    We saw Kyle Pitts Sr. shine in key moments this season, after having an up-and-down career. Even upon Drake London’s return from injury, Pitts’ chemistry and production late in the season with Kirk Cousins is enough for me to believe Atlanta is the best location for him with new coaching entering the scene.

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    The quarterback situation is up in the air, but Kevin Stefanski’s history with TEs, especially when considering the quarterback play (or lack thereof), would be a great sign if Pitts were to re-sign with the Falcons. Browns rookie Harold Fannin Jr. averaged 9.4 fantasy PPG to give Stefanski his fourth straight TE1, peaking in 2024 with David Njoku’s TE4 season.

    Travis Kelce, Chiefs

    If Kelce were to return for the 2026 season, it would be a huge risk to leave Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes. Leaving what has worked and resulted in a Hall of Fame career and consistent production at age 36 would likely lead to a further decline. The return of Eric Bieniemy to replace OC Matt Nagy is a plus in my eyes as well.

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    ​Dallas Goedert, Eagles

    Would leaving Philly give Dallas Goedert a slightly better chance at a top-three ceiling? Maybe. The risk, however, would be very high. Goedert has an incredible floor in a powerhouse offense, producing TE1 numbers for six consecutive seasons. The gadget plays at the goal line may vanish with OC Kevin Patullo out of the picture, but the production elsewhere has a better chance of returning with a new play-caller coming to town.

    Jake Tonges, 49ers

    If George Kittle didn’t go down with an injury in the Wild Card round, this would be a different story. Achilles injuries this late into the season usually lead to missed time the following year and a slow ramp-up upon return. In the last five games without Kittle, Tonges averaged 11.9 half-PPR PPG. ​

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    TEs Who Are Better Off Elsewhere

    Isaiah Likely

    For years, dynasty managers waited for Mark Andrews to leave and Isaiah Likely to take over. Andrews signed an extension, and that dream is lost. Likely has shown he can be a fantasy TE1 at times, and can have that chance next season if he were to leave Baltimore. I would love to see Likely in Washington, where he can use his size in the red zone to have a breakout season. Daniels ranks seventh among QBs in red zone TDs per attempt since entering the league, while Likely ranks ninth in TDs per target over that span. ​

    ​David Njoku

    With the rise of Fannin in Cleveland, David Njoku will be best off elsewhere in 2026. The Browns TE has finished top-eight in three straight seasons before falling off in 2025. As a dominant red zone threat, Njoku’s landing spot as part of a high-scoring offense is crucial. Since 2022, Njoku ranks first in end zone targets per game, leading to his low-end TE1 numbers in a poor offense.

    Early look at 2026 free agency

  • Fantasy Basketball Tank Watch: 5 players Dan Titus is worried about heading for the second half of the season

    The second half is when NBA front offices start making “business decisions.” Here are five players I’m worried about in fantasy basketball as their teams race to the bottom for the 2026 draft.

    Trae Young, Washington Wizards

    Young’s not getting re-evaluated until after the All-Star break. The Wizards are at 10 wins and are getting more reps for second-year PG Bub Carrington while Trae is out. At this point, prioritizing the development of the young core of Kyshawn George, Bilal Coulibaly, Tre Johnson and Alex Sarr is paramount. But just as vital is securing that top-eight protected pick. To do that, they need to finish with at least the fourth-worst record at the end of the season. As of Wednesday, they’re right on track, which reduces the need to rush Young back.

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    Before the trade, Trae was averaging 19.3 and 8.9 — decent, but nothing like peak Trae. Even if he comes back, you’re looking at rest games every other week and mysterious “soreness” whenever they hit a back-to-back. Washington’s got no reason to play him deep into the season. Love the ceiling, hate everything else about this situation, though. I’d try to sell whenever he makes it back to the court.

    Pascal Siakam, Indiana Pacers

    The Pacers are also stuck at 10 wins through Wednesday. Without Tyrese Haliburton, Siakam’s putting up 23.8 points, 7.0 boards, 4.0 assists and 1.2 steals per game. Over his last 10 games, though, he’s giving fantasy managers a reason to sell-high, bumping those numbers up to 25/8/5. The unfortunate news is that Siakam is 31, playing for a team that is firmly playing for more lottery balls.

    Bennedict Mathurin’s probably getting moved; the Pacers lost center Myles Turner over the summer, so Mathurin and Andrew Nembhard are the main guys left to make this team remotely competitive. Playing Siakam heavy minutes late into March does nothing for Indiana except risk injury to one of their building blocks in a lost year. I’d get out of the Siakam business before the unofficial official injury antics begin.

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    Michael Porter Jr., Brooklyn Nets

    MPJ morphed into a legitimate All-Star, with 25.7 points, 7.4 boards, 3.2 assists, 3.8 3s and 1.1 steals per game, all career bests. Brooklyn says it wants to keep him long-term. Cool. It’s also near the basement, trying to lose. Porter is one of the most sought-after sharpshooters ahead of February’s trade deadline and Brooklyn would be foolish not to consider trading him at his peak value.

    A trade to a potential contender would likely hurt his volume and production. Then again, staying with Brooklyn until the end of this year also runs the risk of him getting shut down as we get closer to April. Don’t be surprised when the random rest days start popping up. As good as MPJ has been, there are valid reasons to be wary of his rest-of-season outlook.

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    Zion Williamson, New Orleans Pelicans

    The last thing New Orleans should be doing is tanking. It’s going to lose its top pick to Atlanta via the Derik Queen trade unless it makes the playoffs. Well, with 10 wins as of Jan. 22, it’s not happening. The Pelicans shut down Zion last March, so what makes you think they won’t do it again? Zion’s averaging a respectable 21/6/3 on 58% shooting. A good fantasy player in points leagues and solid in 9-cat with the right build. But between his soft tissue injuries, illnesses, off-the-court distractions and the Pelicans’ sorry record, no fantasy manager can trust him to play meaningful basketball by the fantasy playoffs if he remains with New Orleans.

    It is what it is, and after leaving Wednesday’s game with an illness, I’d use his next blow-up game to send out trade offers.

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    Jusuf Nurkić, Utah Jazz

    The weirdest situation on this list. And when talking about the Jazz, most probably assumed I’d lead with Lauri Markkanen. But nope, it’s Nurk. He’s been surprisingly good this year — double-doubles, elite passing for a big man; the whole deal. But those random DNPs, however, are not great. Utah’s sitting at 15-29, and according to ESPN’s Kevin Pelton, his $19 million expiring contract likely won’t be moved, potentially putting him in the buyout market. That means either riding the pine somewhere else or watching Utah play its young guys over him. Pick your poison.

    There’s been no indication that the Jazz want to move any of their core, so expecting them to play a 31-year-old veteran free-agent-to-be deep into the season feels like wishful thinking.

  • Jeanie Buss denies report she felt LeBron James wasn’t grateful enough after Lakers took son Bronny in NBA Draft

    The Los Angeles Lakers returned to notoriety when the team signed superstar LeBron James in free agency ahead of the 2018-19 NBA season. While that partnership turned out well initially — with James leading the team to a championship in his second season — Lakers owner Jeanie Buss reportedly began to sour on James, per ESPN’s Baxter Holmes.

    That tidbit was revealed as part of a much larger piece on the Buss’ family drama and how it led to the team being sold to Mark Walter. While there are plenty of juicy revelations in the article, Buss’ relationship with James will likely draw the most attention.

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    Buss’ opinion of James reportedly started to change after the Lakers traded for Russell Westbrook in 2021. The move, which the team made to make James happy, backfired. Westbook’s fit on the Lakers was awkward, and the team failed to make the playoffs after acquiring the veteran. Buss reportedly was frustrated with the way James washed his hands of the deal and blamed others after it failed, per ESPN.

    [Get more Lakers news: Los Angeles team feed]

    Buss reportedly even considered trading James at one point — with the Los Angeles Clippers being the most likely destination. That didn’t happen, and James inserted a no-trade clause into his 2024 extension, making a deal impossible now unless James approves it.

    The relationship further soured after the Lakers drafted James’ son, Bronny, in the second round of the 2024 NBA Draft. Buss reportedly felt LeBron should have been more grateful the team picked his son in the draft, per ESPN.

    “And when the Lakers drafted James’ son, Bronny, with the 55th pick in the 2024 draft, Jeanie privately remarked that James should be grateful for such a gesture, but she felt that he wasn’t, people close to the team told ESPN.”

    Bronny, 21, has been used in a reserve role in the NBA. He’s averaged 1.9 points in 51 career games.

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    Buss released a statement to The Athletic refuting the claim about James, saying: “It’s really not right, given all the great things LeBron has done for the Lakers, that he has to be pulled into my family drama. To say that it wasn’t appreciated is just not true and completely unfair to him.”

    But if the report is true, Buss and James could be heading for a clean break in the offseason. James’ contract is up at the end of the season, allowing the 41-year-old to easily leave the team in the offseason. James has still performed well this season and has helped the Lakers to a 26-16 start. If he wants to keep playing, James could almost certainly find a job with another franchise.

    But it’s unclear whether James will do that. The 23-year veteran has not addressed his future in the NBA past the 2025-26 season.

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    If James does come back for one more year, it’s possible he once again considers the Lakers. But if Wednesday’s report is accurate, James’ return to Los Angeles could be dependent on whether Buss, who remains the team’s governor and minority owner, can still co-exist with the superstar.

  • Zion? Anthony Davis? Stand pat? 3 paths forward for Steph Curry’s Warriors

    As soon as Jimmy Butler crumpled to the floor against the Miami Heat on Monday, Warriors center Quinten Post knew it wasn’t good. Butler screeched in pain holding his right knee, while Post, just a few inches away, stood in fear grabbing the back of his head with both hands.

    When Butler went down, so too did the Warriors’ chances of making a deep run this season. That’s the cruel thing about it all. The Warriors had emerged as a legitimate West threat. With a three-point lead at the time of Butler’s injury, the Warriors were on their way to their 12th win in 16 games, having established themselves as a top-five defense with a still-incandescent Stephen Curry powering the attack.

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    Twenty-four hours later, the wound left by Butler’s absence was gashed wide open. The Warriors gave up 145 points to the visiting Toronto Raptors, the most the Warriors had surrendered in a non-overtime game in over 15 seasons. Reeling from Butler’s injury on the second night of a back-to-back, they couldn’t stop the bleeding.

    If there is a silver lining to the Butler torn ACL, it is the calendar. There is no opportune time to tear an ACL, certainly not at Butler’s age (36), but the Warriors have some time before the Feb. 5 trade deadline to figure out what’s next.

    (Hayden Hodge/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

    (Hayden Hodge/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

    At 37, Curry has turned back the clock, improving his scoring average to 27.1 points per game, the most he’s registered since the 2022-23 season. He is now the oldest player to ever average 27 points per game, per Stathead.com tracking. Scoring this much at this age is not something LeBron, KD, MJ or Kobe has ever done. To put it in perspective, Ray Allen, to whom Curry was often compared to earlier in his career, never averaged 27 points per game, period.

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    Which is why the Warriors have a tough decision ahead of them. Do they maximize Curry’s title window or preserve the post-Curry war chest?

    Here are three pathways for the Warriors in the aftermath of Butler’s injury.

    Path 1: Wait for Butler to come back

    The Jimmy Butler trade last year had its doubters, but you can’t deny he changed the Warriors’ trajectory. Over the last two seasons, with Butler in the lineup, the Warriors are 44-16, which translates to a 55-win pace over 82 games. Without Butler in the lineup, the Warriors are 3-6, which … not good.

    For Warriors owner Joe Lacob and general manager Mike Dunleavy Jr., the Curry-Butler-Draymond Green trio is worth clinging to, at least in theory. Butler’s contract owes him $54 million this season and $57.1 million next season, and there was always a downside that, for all of Butler’s talents, things could go poorly. Trading for a 35-year-old with hard miles on the tires always comes with risk, even for someone as competitive and fiery as Butler.

    But the research of Jeff Stotts of InStreetClothes.com can’t be ignored. Since Stotts has meticulously kept tabs on NBA injuries since the 2005-06 season, no player has ever come back from an ACL injury at Butler’s age. At 36, Butler is the second-oldest player to have suffered the injury, behind only Chris “Birdman” Andersen, who tore his ACL in December 2016 at 38 years old. Andersen never played again.

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    There is reason for optimism, though. Andersen was never the caliber of player that Butler is. When Andersen tore his ACL, he was playing on a one-year commitment signed for the veteran’s minimum. Without a contract in hand, it’s understandable why Andersen hung it up for good. Butler, on the other hand, has the opportunity to come back to a team led by Curry and Green for one last hurrah. Notably, all three players are on expiring deals next season.

    [Subscribe to Yahoo Sports NBA on YouTube]

    Dunleavy has made sure to keep the powder keg dry. The only pick the Warriors owe is a top-20 protected 2030 pick to Washington as part of the Chris Paul trade that will simply convert to a second-round pick if it doesn’t convey. For his part, Dunleavy has said he plans on Butler coming back to the Warriors next season.

    Dunleavy’s unwillingness to trade first-round picks down the road is a signal that he wants to maintain long-term sustainability rather than go all in for the twilight of Curry’s career. You can read it that way. But there may be another way to view it.

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    Path 2: Trade for another star now

    An alternate interpretation of the Warriors’ stingy handling of first-round picks: They need them for one last big swing. The Butler contract, with one more year left after this season, could be appealing if another team needs to pivot away from a star player and wants to offload long-term money. Luckily for the Warriors, there are a few options here.

    Let’s run through a couple.

    The Anthony Davis trade (and Klay reunion)

    • Warriors receive: Anthony Davis, Klay Thompson, Dante Exum

    • Mavericks receive: Jimmy Butler, Jonathan Kuminga and a top-four protected 2028 first-round pick from Golden State

    • Nets receive: D’Angelo Russell and a lottery-protected 2026 first-round pick from Golden State

    Is it risky for Golden State? Yes. Is it sentimental? Sure. Is it a bad idea? I don’t think so. Keeping Butler for the next two seasons may be the easiest but also the worst option on the table. You have to do right by Curry. If he wants to keep contending at the highest level in Golden State, this is a no-brainer.

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    Especially since Davis and Curry have a relationship already. Davis, Curry and coach Steve Kerr won gold together at the 2024 Paris Olympics, so it’s not like this would be the first time they’ve come together to win it all.

    It needs to be pointed out that Davis is out for at least another month with a hand injury. While that timetable is not ideal, one month is way better than the potential 12-month layoff for Butler at the same salary. At 32 years old, Davis is hardly the most reliable star from a player health standpoint, but at least the finger injury won’t affect his wheels. The same can’t be said for Butler upon his return.

    Like Butler, Davis would be a floor-raiser star for the Warriors, who are operating on a much different timeline than Dallas now that the Mavs have Cooper Flagg. Davis has a $62.8 million player option for 2027-28, which may not be palatable for Dallas. In Golden State, with Curry still playing at a high level, that might be the price of maximizing Curry’s pursuit for a fifth championship.

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    [Get more Warriors news: Golden State team feed]

    The Davis acquisition would also help keep Green fresher since neither of them wants to play the 5 full time and they can share the burden of the center position. With Davis occupying the block, a floor-spacing wing like Thompson becomes even more essential. His emotional return would be icing on the cake both in nostalgia and need. With deals all expiring in 2026-27, I could see Curry, Green and Thompson taking below-market deals to keep it going.

    On the Dallas side, the Mavs free themselves of Davis’ monster player option in 2027-28 and take a low-commitment chance on Kuminga, who is still 23 years old. Butler’s expiring contract could be flipped again at next year’s deadline to a contender with draft assets. In the meantime, Butler and Kyrie Irving could both rehab from their respective ACL tears. Without control over their first-round picks from 2027-30, the time for Dallas’ ping-pong prioritization is now.

    To facilitate the deal, the Nets receive D’Angelo Russell for a third time. Because why not. They could either waive him or keep him for yet another go-round on the Russell carousel. For their services, the Warriors would send a heavily protected first-round pick.

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    The Zion Williamson and Trey Murphy III trade (and Kevon Looney reunion)

    • Warriors receive: Zion Williamson, Trey Murphy III and Kevon Looney

    • Pelicans receive: Jimmy Butler, Jonathan Kuminga, two first-round picks (2026 and 2032) and a 2027 first-round pick swap

    • Nets receive: Jordan Hawkins and a 2028 top-20 protected pick

    Dunleavy told reporters Tuesday he wouldn’t be looking to trade a post-Steph first-round pick unless he was getting a big-time player in return.

    “If we’re talking about trading draft picks that will be going out when Steph isn’t here, it’s going to have to be a player that we think we’ll be getting back that is going to be here when those picks are going out,” Dunleavy said. “That player’s going to have to be pretty impactful. It would take a good amount — positionally, play style, archetype, all that. I would leave it pretty broad and open.

    “But if there’s a great player to be had, we’ve got everything in the war chest that we would be willing to use.”

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    Do Zion Williamson or Trey Murphy III qualify? Maybe not individually. But if you’re getting both? Absolutely.

    According to Chris Haynes, the Pelicans are not trading their core group, but goodness gracious, the Zion Williamson experience has run its course in New Orleans. The team has lost 14 of its last 16 games with Williamson in uniform (he left Wednesday’s game early with an illness). The only wins have come against … Brooklyn and Washington. It’s way past time to blow it up and move on from the former No. 1 overall pick now that he’s healthy and easier to trade.

    Williamson and Murphy are both 25 years old and too talented to be floundering on a team clearly building around rookies Jeremiah Fears and Derik Queen. Insert Zion and TM3 in the Warriors’ championship culture and it wouldn’t surprise me at all to see them blossom into winning contributors on a playoff team. As a bonus, they’re young enough to be the bridge to the post-Steph era and experienced enough to be win-now players.

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    Of course, like Davis, Williamson is an injury wild card. Taking on a talent like Williamson would be a bet on Warriors director of sports medicine and performance Rick Celebrini to get Williamson back on track and keep him there. It’s a risk, but would you rather have Butler’s lost salary and Kuminga or the upside of Williamson and Murphy? I know what I would choose. And Kevon Looney coming back to the Bay? Imagine that standing ovation.

    As for the Pelicans, they can use the Warriors’ unprotected 2026 pick as a soft landing from the fallout of trading its 2026 “super first” pick to Atlanta that has Milwaukee swap rights. As of now, the Pelicans have no first-round pick in the 2026 draft; the Warriors can change that. While they unload two lob threats for Queen, they acquire one in Kuminga, who is younger, similarly athletic and needs a fresh start.

    Path 3: Revisit this offseason

    Butler’s contract seems like an albatross now, with over $100 million combined coming to him this season and next. But as soon as the NBA fiscal calendar turns this offseason, Butler’s expiring contract could become a lot more appealing to teams looking to cleanse their long-term cap sheet.

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    Would Utah want to move Lauri Markkanen’s long-term deal? What about Cleveland and Evan Mobley if they flame out again? What about Giannis? Those questions may get a hard “no” now, but that calculus could change over the summer. Especially if Kuminga balls out the rest of the season.

    While it seems like the Warriors caught a break by having this injury happen now rather than after the deadline, two weeks may be too quick for a Butler market to materialize. There are so many unknowables right now. I would be shocked if Butler hung it up for good like Andersen, especially since he vowed on Instagram to “be back before you know it.”

    Questions will be surrounding him for the foreseeable future. How’s his rehab going? Will he be back in time for the 2026-27 deadline? Will he be back at all for next season?

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    These are questions that don’t have answers now. But this summer, a return-to-play program will come into focus and help teams chart their future. Any team looking to play Butler next season or flip him to a contender will want to know his plan and status for next season as soon as possible. In that sense, two weeks doesn’t seem like a lot of time at all.

    If they take this path, the Warriors could look at the rest of the 2025-26 season as something of a reset. Don’t run Curry and Green into the ground and keep an eye for the future. If it ends up delivering more ping-pong balls on draft night, so be it.

    Another thing: if the Warriors go all in now, the 2026 first-round pick becomes less attractive to teams. As I mentioned earlier and outlined on the Big Number on Wednesday, the Warriors are 3-6 without Butler in uniform since they acquired him at last year’s trade deadline. If they continue at a similar pace, they could end up with a lottery pick. Any trade talks involving absorbing Butler’s contract will become that much sweeter if it’s a known lottery pick as opposed to a late first-rounder.

    With that said, of all the options outlined here, I’m pushing hard for Path 2. Stephen Curry is the principal reason the Warriors currently rank as the most valuable franchise in the sport. They have to do right by him and go for it while he’s still (inexplicably) an All-NBA player. If I’m the front office, I’d call up Pelicans president of basketball operations Joe Dumars and go for the Pelicans move as a top priority now. If talks don’t result in a move now, it could happen later. Sometimes the trade deadline is just setting the stage for summer fireworks. Stay tuned.

  • Tyreek Hill reacts to Chiefs’ decision to bring back offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy

    It’s going to be another fascinating offseason for Miami Dolphins wideout Tyreek Hill. After implying he wanted out last season, Hill stuck with the Dolphins and turned in a disappointing season before sustaining a brutal leg injury in Week 4.

    All of those factors — combined with the team’s hiring of Jeff Hafley as head coach following the firing of Mike McDaniel — add some major question marks to Hill’s future with the franchise.

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    If Hill is leaving the team in the offseason, he may have tipped his hand on a potential landing spot. Hill cryptically decided to comment after his former team, the Kansas City Chiefs, brought back Eric Bieniemy as their offensive coordinator.

    Hill didn’t say much about the move, merely noting it on Twitter before adding “hm.”

    It’s obviously foolish to read into a vague tweet, but Hill’s relationship with both the Chiefs and Bieniemy adds a different level to the situation. Hill experienced his best years in the NFL under Bieniemy. From 2018-21, Hill averaged 85.8 catches per year, with 1,213.5 receiving yards and 10.8 touchdowns.

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    But Hill was traded from the Chiefs following the 2021 NFL season. The move was likely made due to Hill’s upcoming extension. After being traded, Hill immediately signed a four-year, $120 million extension with the Dolphins.

    Bieniemy stuck around with the Chiefs for one more year before leaving to join the Commanders. The team struggled to put up points, and Bieniemy was let go after Ron Rivera was fired in the offseason. Bieniemy spent 2024 as UCLA’s offensive coordinator and then became the running backs coach with the Chicago Bears in 2025.

    The Bears employed one of the best running games in the league, leading to Bieniemy’s reunion with the Chiefs.

    While Hill’s tweet suggests he’s interested in Bieniemy going back to the Chiefs, a lot would have to happen in order for Hill to reunite with his old franchise. Hill is still under contract with the Dolphins for 2026, though the team does have an easy out from his contract this offseason. Even if that happens, Hill is coming back from a gruesome injury. It’s unclear whether he’ll be healthy enough to sign with any team in the offseason should he become available.

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    Additionally, Hill could just be trolling. On Wednesday, he sent the exact same tweet about Mike McDaniel landing with the Los Angeles Chargers as offensive coordinator. Does that mean Hill wants to join McDaniel? Or is Hill simply trying to drum up some attention on social media?

    Regardless of his motives, Hill is a player worth watching this offseason. Given his ability, Hill could still have an elite season or two left in him before regression hits. The injury complicates things, but he could be an impact acquisition if the Dolphins decide to cut bait on the five-time All-Pro this offseason.

    The Chiefs are in need of a field-stretching wideout, so there’s a natural fit there if Hill is actually interested in playing for Bieniemy again.

  • Fantasy Football Video: Will Bears offense regress in 2026 after breakout campaign?

    The Chicago Bears have struggled with stability at the quarterback position and at head coach for what feels like forever. But with Caleb Williams and Ben Johnson in place for the foreseeable future, the Bears are on an upward trajectory.

    Chicago defeated one of its division rivals in the Green Bay Packers in the playoffs and nearly upset the Los Angeles Rams in the divisional round to reach the NFC title game for the first time since 2010.

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    The 2025 Bears finished this season ranked sixth in yards per game (369.2) and ninth in points per game (25.9). That was a huge improvement from 2024, when Chicago was dead last in yards per game and toward the bottom in points. Matt Harmon and Scott Pianowski discussed the possibility of regression for the Bears offense in 2026 on a recent episode of the Yahoo Fantasy Forecast.

    Pianowski believes the pieces are in place for the Bears to have continued success but the NFC North division remains a gauntlet to traverse each season. If anything will hold back Chicago, its the competitiveness in the North.

    Harmon compares the Bears to the 2024 Commanders, who regressed big time this season in Jayden Daniels’ second year. The differences is that the Bears are loaded with young offensive talent in TE Colston Loveland, and WRs Rome Odunze and Luther Burden III, plus RB Kyle Monangai.

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    Harmon also points to all the fourth-quarter heroics that were needed to lift the Bears to an 11-6 record and the division title. While Chicago would be ripe for regression given all the comeback wins, Williams’ volatility also allows for growth and improvement. And that is also true for all of the young talent on offense for the Bears.

    Williams, 24, finished his second NFL season just shy of 4,000 passing yards with 27 touchdowns and seven interceptions in 17 games. He led the NFL with six fourth-quarter comebacks and added one in the playoffs.

    Odunze looked like he was on track for a breakout second campaign but injuries derailed his season. He finished with 44 catches for 661 yards and six touchdowns in 12 games.

    Loveland, a first-round pick in the 2025 NFL Draft, showed the most promise of any young Bears pass-catcher with 58 receptions for 713 yards and six touchdowns. He really didn’t start seeing significant snaps until around midseason.

    Yahoo analyst Justin Boone has plenty of Bears players riddled throughout his top-150 rankings of players for 2026 fantasy football drafts. See where they land here.

  • Inside Roberto Martínez’s World Cup playbook: Mental readiness, rest and North America

    PHILADELPHIA — The long line of soccer coaches and admirers seeking to meet the featured speaker last Thursday snaked along a wall of the large meeting room before bending toward a small stage.

    For some 40 minutes, Roberto Martínez greeted them with a handshake, smile and small talk, never showing a hint of impatience or irritation. Portugal’s charming national team boss had just completed an hour-long discussion at the United Soccer Coaches Convention, sharing his personal story and answering questions about Cristiano Ronaldo, the fast-approaching World Cup, tactical options and the sport at large.

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    With participants in the next scheduled session beginning to arrive, including former U.S. players Heather O’Reilly and Lori Lindsey, organizers marked the end of the line. By then, though, Martínez had engaged with almost everyone.

    “Earlier, I saw him upstairs buying coffee for people he’d probably just met,” Lindsey said.

    Less than five months before the World Cup — and 10 weeks before a friendly against the U.S. in Atlanta — the 52-year-old Spaniard was a popular figure at a four-day event billed as the “world’s largest annual gathering of soccer coaches.”

    Most of the some 10,000 conventioneers are youth and college coaches, plus administrators and product exhibitors, from across America.

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    Martínez marveled at the enormity of it all and the intensity of engagement in U.S. soccer circles.

    “The main impression I got is the sheer potential of USA soccer,” he said in an interview, bookended by additional appointments. “When you look at the numbers and how they affect so many players, when you look at the passion that exists and the culture behind it, you can understand that soccer, without being the No. 1 sport in the U.S., is quite scary.”

    (Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports illustration)

    (Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports illustration)

    (Grant Thomas/Yahoo Sports illustration)

    Martínez accepted the invitation to not only impart wisdom but to gain a better understanding of the landscape before the World Cup. He and longtime assistant Richard Evans continued gathering information about travel logistics, time differences, weather impact and many other factors.

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    Ranked No. 6 by FIFA and boasting an absurd array of talent, Portugal will arrive with high expectations after winning the UEFA Nations League last summer. Two Group K matches in Houston — against an intercontinental playoff winner and Uzbekistan — will precede a showdown with Colombia in greater Miami.

    Before arriving stateside five days before his June 17 opener, Martínez said he doesn’t want to leave anything to chance.

    “It’s such a complex World Cup compared to the last one; Qatar was the complete opposite in terms of everything was very centralized,” he said. The 2022 tournament in pint-sized Qatar was Martínez’s second World Cup in charge of Belgium, which failed to get out of the group stage after advancing to the semifinals and finishing third in Russia four years prior.

    “I don’t want to be finding too many surprises during the competition,” which will take place at 16 venues in the U.S., Mexico and Canada, he said. “I want to manage the unexpected as much as I can, but it is the complexity of three countries, huge distances and logistics. You’re trying to avoid uncertainty — or kill uncertainty — that the players and the team could have in a journey like a World Cup.”

    Portugal's Spanish coach Roberto Martinez gestures during the 2026 World Cup qualifiers Europe zone group F football match between Portugal and Armenia, at Dragao stadium in Porto on November 16, 2025. (Photo by Miguel RIOPA / AFP) (Photo by MIGUEL RIOPA/AFP via Getty Images)

    Portugal’s Spanish coach Roberto Martinez gestures during the 2026 World Cup qualifiers Europe zone group F football match between Portugal and Armenia, at Dragao stadium in Porto on November 16, 2025. (Photo by Miguel RIOPA / AFP) (Photo by MIGUEL RIOPA/AFP via Getty Images)

    (MIGUEL RIOPA via Getty Images)

    Portugal plans to set up base camp in the Miami area, even though the first two games are in Houston. It didn’t make sense to acclimate in Texas, Martínez noted, because NRG Stadium is indoors. By advancing to the knockout stage with a first- or second-place finish, Portugal would play in the Round of 32 in Kansas City, Missouri, or Toronto. Another victory would send it to an indoor venue in Vancouver or Arlington, Texas.

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    To help prepare for the World Cup, Martínez drew from his experiences last summer following the FIFA Club World Cup around the United States.

    Martínez will use the March international window to further preparations with a March 28 friendly against Mexico at Estadio Azteca in Mexico City and a March 31 clash with the United States at Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium. (Both are World Cup venues.)

    “We are training at sea level [in Playa del Carmen, Mexico] and playing at high altitude [in Mexico City], which will allow us to have a lot of information of our performance in those conditions,” he said. “Then going to Atlanta in a closed stadium to match a little bit of what we’re going to experience” at the World Cup in Houston.

    With the players facing up to 50 days on World Cup assignment, Martínez opted to use the March window for intensive work overseas. After at least a week off in May, Portugal will play two home friendlies before traveling to the U.S.

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    “The [club] season is so long for the players that you need to reduce to a minimum the preparation to the World Cup before the World Cup,” he said. “So you need to use as much time as you can at home to prepare. Priority No. 1 is: How can we kill mental fatigue for the players before a World Cup?”

    Martínez is no stranger on the U.S. scene, which partially explained his popularity at the convention. He was an ESPN studio analyst on location at the 2010 and 2014 World Cup and 2012 and 2016 European Championship.

    Martínez said he accepted ESPN’s 2010 offer in part to prepare himself for coaching in a World Cup someday. At the time, he was coaching Wigan in the Premier League.

    “The season is so intense you have no time to look how you could prepare to be an international coach,” he said. “So my idea was [to] do it when I’m on holiday to follow a World Cup, to be part of the [ESPN] group of breaking the game down, but internally, to prepare myself to see how the national teams would prepare for the World Cup.”

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    He spent another summer with his Scottish wife Beth in Connecticut near ESPN headquarters to analyze the FIFA Confederations Cup. He has also assisted CBS Sports’ coverage of the UEFA Champions League.

    He loved doing TV, saying during his Philadelphia seminar, “This is so easy, isn’t it? You look at what went wrong and you say what could have gone right? The problems when you are the coach, you have to guess before it happens. That’s the hardest thing, but to be on TV and talking about it is the easiest job in the world.”

    MUNICH, GERMANY - JUNE 08: Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal celebrates victory with Roberto Martinez, Manager of Portugal, following the UEFA Nations League 2025 final match between Portugal and Spain at Munich Football Arena on June 08, 2025 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Stefan Matzke - sampics/Getty Images)

    MUNICH, GERMANY – JUNE 08: Cristiano Ronaldo of Portugal celebrates victory with Roberto Martinez, Manager of Portugal, following the UEFA Nations League 2025 final match between Portugal and Spain at Munich Football Arena on June 08, 2025 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Stefan Matzke – sampics/Getty Images)

    (Stefan Matzke – sampics via Getty Images)

    He’ll embrace the hard part this summer with Portugal, which has not advanced past the World Cup quarterfinals since finishing fourth in 2006 in Germany. He has a wealth of talent, featuring Ronaldo, Bruce Fernandes, Vitinha, Bernardo Silva, Rafael Leão, Nuno Mendes and Rúben Dias, among others.

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    The chemistry, though, needs to be just right.

    “You don’t pick the best 26 players,” he cautioned at the seminar. “You pick the best 26 members that make the best team, which is a concept difficult to understand. If you’ve got a player that plays every minute and is the star of their [club] team and he comes to a national team and he can only play five or six minutes [as] a supportive player, it’s a completely different role. It’s very, very difficult to have a committed player in that role.”

    Martínez says there are no such commitment issues from Ronaldo, who in 2022 clashed with then-coach Fernando Santos and lost his starting job at a major tournament for the first time in 14 years.

    Ahead of his 41st birthday next month and his sixth World Cup, the legendary forward has “the passion and the hunger of a 16 years old,” Martínez said. “Every day is an opportunity for him to become better. It’s very difficult, after winning, to get up the next day with the same conviction. That’s what makes him different. I don’t know if it’s genetics or the habits he has created or a bit of both, but it’s a real example that is very rare.”

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    While Ronaldo remains a key figure, Martínez said selecting a starting lineup is not the same these days.

    “We don’t work anymore with starting elevens,” he said. “This is something from the past. Now you’ve got five substitutions [instead of three]. If you only coach the first 11, you’re going to miss a big part of the preparation. …  Some players will start; some players will finish the game. … There are no substitutes; there are game-changers.”

    Since taking the Portuguese helm three years ago, Martínez has forged a 25-5-6 record. The 2024 European Championship ended with a shootout loss to France in the quarterfinals. A year later in the Nations League finals, Portugal defeated Germany in Munich and outlasted Spain in a championship shootout.

    Now comes the World Cup, which has swelled from 32 to 48 teams — an expansion criticized by many but embraced by Martínez.

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    “A World Cup should be for everybody — the more teams, the better,” he said. However, he suggests a future format change that would reward the group winner with one fewer match in the knockout stage.

    The tournament will unfold largely in a country with which he has grown familiar. Might he someday want to coach in the U.S.?

    “I don’t think anybody could sit down and plan a career,” he said. “My only measurement or objective is to get to the end of the day and go to bed and say, ‘Yeah, I’ve done everything I had to do.’ My focus now is just to prepare Portugal the best possible way, and that’s it. The day I finish my contract, then it is a new opportunity, a new challenge.”