Category: Sport

  • Dodgers pitcher Blake Snell could miss Opening Day with slower-paced offseason for ‘tired’ arm

    The Los Angeles Dodgers might not begin the 2026 MLB season with Blake Snell in their Opening Day starting rotation.

    Snell, 33, delayed the start of his offseason throwing program due to his left arm feeling “tired” and “exhausted” following six postseason appearances (five starts) that totaled 34 innings, the California Post’s Jack Harris reports. Snell’s workload included a 1 1/3-inning scoreless relief outing in the Dodgers’ Game 7 World Series win over the Toronto Blue Jays.

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    [Get more Dodgers news: Los Angeles team feed]

    “You want to ramp up, but I gotta take my time and get healthy,” Snell told Harris while appearing at a team charity event.

    “I feel like I’m doing the right thing. I feel good. I’ve been throwing. It feels better,” he added. “In the postseason, I gave everything I had for that. But on the front end of spring, I’ll have to be patient and let my body get to 100%.”

    Snell said the team is encouraging him to take a patient approach, preferring that he be completely healthy before pitching regular-season innings.

    The Dodgers presumably have enough depth in their starting rotation to wait for Snell. World Series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Tyler Glasnow, Roki Sasaki and Shohei Ohtani will be part of the starting staff, in addition to River Ryan, Gavin Stone and Emmet Sheehan being expected to contribute.

    However, nearly all of those pitchers carry their own injury concerns.

    The Dodgers might take a similarly cautious approach with Yamamoto, who had a spectacular postseason in which he pitched 2 2/3 innings of relief in Game 7 one night after throwing six innings in a Game 6 start. Altogether, he pitched 37 1/3 innings in six postseason appearances (five starts).

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    Glasnow is injury-prone and was limited to 18 regular-season starts in 2025 due to right shoulder inflammation. In 2024, he made only 22 starts because of back tightness and elbow tendonitis throughout the season.

    Sasaki struggled with a shoulder injury that forced the Dodgers to move him from the rotation to the bullpen during the postseason (in which he was an effective closer). And Ohtani’s innings must be monitored closely, sometimes with six or seven days between starts, while he balances turns in the rotation (following 2023 elbow surgery) with appearing in the every-day lineup as the team’s designated hitter.

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    Among the hopeful reinforcements, Ryan missed all of last season while working his way back from Tommy John surgery in 2024. Stone also missed the 2025 campaign following shoulder surgery. Sheehan returned from reconstructive elbow surgery but made just 14 appearances (12 starts) last season.

    Other rotation options for the Dodgers include Justin Wrobleski, Ben Casparius, Kyle Hurt, Landon Knack and Bobby Miller. All of those arms will likely be needed after 2025’s deep postseason run, with another one expected for 2026.

  • NFL’s chief medical officer ‘not familiar with anything’ that supports debunked substation conspiracy theory about 49ers’ injuries

    The San Francisco 49ers were bit by the injury bug again this season, and badly too. Among others, they lost quarterback Brock Purdy, wide receiver Ricky Pearsall, tight end George Kittle, defensive end Nick Bosa and linebacker Fred Warner for significant periods of time.

    But the notion that the 49ers have led the NFL in non-direct contact and lower-extremity injuries is “simply not true,” according to the league’s chief medical officer, Dr. Allen Sills.

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    “That’s false,” Sills said Friday during the league’s health and safety call, per NBC Sports Bay Area’s Matt Maiocco.

    Additionally, Sills commented on the debunked conspiracy theory that links the 49ers’ unfortunate injury history to the proximity of the Silicon Valley Power Mission Substation, which is located next to Levi’s Stadium — also the site of this year’s Super Bowl and six World Cup matches this summer — and adjacent to the team’s practice facility.

    “I would tell you that I’m not familiar with anything in the sports medicine literature that supports those associations, but I would also tell you that injury causation is really complex,” Sills said, per The Athletic.

    SANTA CLARA, CA - AUGUST 05: San Francisco 49ers quarterback Brock Purdy (13) and San Francisco 49ers quarterback Carter Bradley (17) perform drills during San Francisco 49ers Training Camp on August 5, 2025 at the SAP Performance Facility in Santa Clara, CA. (Photo by Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    The 49ers have practiced next to the Silicon Valley Power Mission Substation since 1988 and won three Super Bowls in that span. (Photo by Matthew Huang/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    Sills added, via The Athletic:

    “If you think about biology and medicine, you don’t have usually one single factor that drives biological systems. And, so, when we think about injury causation, whether it’s lower-extremity strains or ACL or concussion … it’s equipment, it’s training, it’s prior injury history, it’s exposure, it’s play type. There’s so many things that go into that. And, so, I think it’s very rare in a biological system that you’ll see one factor that really drives an injury risk.

    “So with that being said, we look at all factors. We look at it very comprehensively. I think it’s also important … to say that we have seen significant erroneous conclusions drawn from people using publicly available data sources. And what I mean by that is there’s research that often gets published where people take injury reports that are distributed media and use that to try to assess an injury burden. And those are almost universally wrong because they’re just not complete, and they’re not complete because they don’t have all the data because not everything gets put into those disclosure systems.”

    [Get more 49ers news: San Francisco team feed]

    The theory that the 49ers’ high volume of injuries is influenced by exposure to electromotive force, or EMF, which is characterized as the invisible electricity from electrical equipment like power lines, gained steam online after it was perpetuated by a person who, as reported by The Washington Post, describes himself on social media as a “board-certified quantum biology practitioner.”

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    His post has gained more than 22 million views, and the theory has been discussed among NFL players. That theory, however, has been rejected by medical experts, including weeks before Sills’ remarks on Friday.

    It’s also important to note that the 49ers have practiced next to the substation since 1988 and won three Super Bowls in that span.

    Frank de Vocht, a professor of epidemiology and public health at Bristol Medical School in England, said the theory is “nonsense,” per the Post, which described him as a leading expert on how EMF affects humans.

    Similarly, Jerrold Bushberg, a radiology professor at UC Davis, told Front Office Sports that “there is no firmly established evidence” that backs up the theory.

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    49ers general manager John Lynch was asked about the substation theory at his end-of-season news conference on Jan. 21.

    “Because it deals with, allegedly, the health and safety of our players, I think you have to look into everything,” Lynch said.

  • Seattle Seahawks to reportedly go up for sale after Super Bowl 60; Paul Allen estate disputes story

    The Super Bowl LX-bound Seattle Seahawks will go up for sale after their Feb. 8 matchup with the New England Patriots, according to ESPN’s Seth Wickersham and Brady Henderson.

    However, the Paul G. Allen estate disputed the ESPN report, stating the team is not for sale.

    “We don’t comment on rumors or speculation, and the team is not for sale,” said a spokesperson for the estate in a statement (via NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport).

    “We’ve already said that will change at some point per Paul’s wishes, but I have no news to share,” the statement continued. “Our focus right now is winning the Super Bowl and completing the sale of the Portland Trail Blazers in the coming months.”

    After former owner Paul Allen passed away in 2018, the Seahawks and the NBA’s Portland Trail Blazers have been owned by Allen’s estate. The Blazers are being sold to a group led by Carolina Hurricanes owner Tom Dundon for more than $4 billion.

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    [Get more Seahawks news: Seattle team feed]

    ESPN’s report cited an anonymous team executive who speculated the team could be sold for $7 billion or more; Sportico valued the Seahawks at $6.59 billion last fall, which ranked 14th in the league. The Washington Commanders were the most recent NFL team to be sold, purchased for a then-record $6.05 billion in 2023.

    Since Allen’s death in 2018, the Seahawks (and Trail Blazers) have been controlled by his sister, Jody Allen, as the executor of the trust. She has been a public presence with the team, raising the 12 flag before last Sunday’s NFC championship game and accepting the George S. Halas Trophy after Seattle defeated the Los Angeles Rams, 31-27, to advance to the Super Bowl.

    On Friday, Seahawks coach Mike Macdonald told reporters he and Allen speak every week after each game and she often asks “piercing questions.”

    Jody Allen has asserted several times the franchise is not for sale. However, Paul Allen’s intention was for the teams to eventually be sold and for the resulting revenue to be donated to charity.

    “The time will come when that changes given Paul’s plans to dedicate the vast majority of his wealth to philanthropy,” Jody Allen said in a 2022 statement (via the Seattle Times). “But estates of this size and complexity can take 10 to 20 years to wind down. There is no preordained timeline by which the teams must be sold.”

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    Allen, a co-founder of Microsoft, purchased the Seahawks in 1997 for $200 million. He kept the team in Seattle after previous owner Ken Behring attempted to move it to Los Angeles. Behring was unhappy with the Seahawks’ then-home stadium at the Kingdome. A condition of Allen buying the team was getting a new stadium. What is now Lumen Field opened in 2002.

    The Seahawks going up for sale would mark the first time in the NFL’s Super Bowl era that an entire franchise would be available following the game. In 1991, 50% of the New York Giants were purchased by Preston Robert Tisch, according to ESPN.

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    If and when the Seahawks are sold, the next owner will be the fourth for the franchise. The Nordstrom family originally owned the team before Behring.

  • Super Bowl 2026: Patriots DC Terrell Williams returns to team cancer-free after 5-month battle

    The New England Patriots are returning to the Super Bowl after a six-year absence, and they’ll get their own return on the sidelines: defensive coordinator Terrell Williams. Williams is cancer-free after being diagnosed with prostate cancer early in the season, according to Andrew Callahan of the Boston Herald.

    Williams, 51, had multiple health scares before stepping away from the team. This will be the first time since September that Williams is back on the sidelines. On Sept. 10, Williams took a leave of absence from the team. Williams was also away from the team after a medical procedure earlier in 2025. In August, Williams had a health scare during practice and was treated for dehydration.

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    [Get more Patriots news: New England team feed]

    In Williams’ absence, linebackers coach Zak Kuhr took over play-calling duties, while defensive assistant Vinny DePalma worked with the linebackers.

    This was Williams’ first season with the Patriots after spending a year with the Detroit Lions as their defensive line coach and run game coordinator. Williams spent six seasons with the Titans as their assistant head coach and defensive line coach under Patriots head coach Mike Vrabel.

    On Feb. 8, the Patriots will face the Seattle Seahawks in the Super Bowl in Santa Clara, California.

  • Lions’ Amon-Ra St. Brown and Chargers’ Keenan Allen to play in NBA All-Star Celebrity Game

    Detroit Lions wide receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown and Los Angeles Chargers wide receiver Keenan Allen will put the NBA vs. NFL debate to the test when they compete in the NBA All-Star Celebrity Game.

    With the NBA All-Star Celebrity Game being held in Los Angeles this year, it will be a homecoming of sorts for St. Brown and Allen. St. Brown is from Anaheim Hills, California, and starred at USC for three seasons before being selected by the Lions in the fourth round of the 2021 NFL Draft.

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    Allen also spent his college years in California, playing three seasons for the Cal Golden Bears before being drafted by the Chargers in 2013. Allen has also spent 12 of his 13 seasons with the Chargers, first in San Diego and then in Los Angeles after their relocation.

    St. Brown is coming off his fourth straight 1,000-yard season and finished the year with 117 catches for 1,401 yards and 11 touchdowns. While the 26-year-old receiver had a great year statistically, the Lions missed the playoffs for the first time in two seasons and finished fourth in the NFC North division. St. Brown will also take part in Sunday’s NFL Pro Bowl and was a second-team All-Pro.

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    In his first year back with the Chargers after a season with the Chicago Bears, Allen remained productive. The 33-year-old receiver led the team with 81 receptions and had 777 yards and 4 touchdowns. Allen’s season ended with a 16-3 wild-card loss to the New England Patriots, which resulted in the firing of former offensive coordinator Greg Roman. Allen is set to become a free agent this offseason.

    The Celebrity game will be on Friday, Feb. 13, and will be held on the first day of All-Star Weekend.

  • Brooks Koepka barely makes the cut at Torrey Pines, then gets the family moment he wanted after leaving LIV Golf

    SAN DIEGO — Brooks Koepka walked off the final green late Friday afternoon and immediately found his wife, Jena Sims, and their 2-year-old son, Crew, waiting for him.

    Koepka greeted his wife and quickly scooped up an excited Crew for the walk back from the ninth green at the North Course down to the scorers’ room at the clubhouse at Torrey Pines, safe for the weekend.

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    That moment, he said earlier in the week, was the entire reason he wanted to leave LIV Golf and come back to the PGA Tour. He wanted to be able to spend more time with his family after a rough couple of months for them off the course.

    “I don’t know the last time I’ve actually made a cut and they’ve still been there,” Koepka said, smiling.

    “It was so nice to have them out there, and it felt good. I don’t know, my son doesn’t really know what’s going on, but it’s cool for me to have them here.”

    Koepka posted a 4-under 68 on Friday in the second round of the Farmers Insurance Open, which marked his first non-major championship PGA Tour event in nearly four years. That, after his 1-over opening round on the South Course on Thursday, got him to 3-under for the week — which was just good enough to make the cut on the number.

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    As a result, Koepka will make it into the weekend and get all four rounds in his first Tour event back.

    While his round was significantly better than the initial outing — Koepka even made a birdie at the par-5 17th before carding two birdies in his final five holes — he was still a bit anxious as he settled back into life on Tour. It was just a different kind than what he felt 24 hours earlier.

    “It was definitely different,” he said of his second round. “I think yesterday I was excited to play, nervous and kind of didn’t know what to expect. Today felt more normal, I guess.

    “I mean, don’t get me wrong, I definitely still got antsy. But I guess maybe a little bit of nerves, just trying to figure it out and see where my game’s at too, right? I feel like I’m playing really well. It’s just been a long layoff.”

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    Koepka very likely won’t be able to catch Justin Rose and make a run at the title this weekend. The deficit he’s facing is massive. But he’s going to get to play all four rounds, and have Jena and Crew by his side.

    Justin Rose sets 36-hole record, extends lead

    Unlike plenty who took it on before him this week, the South Course was incredibly easy for Justin Rose.

    Rose erupted on the North Course on Thursday, where he carded a 10-under 62 on the easier of the two courses to begin the tournament and instantly jump into the solo lead. Friday was nearly as dominant, too. Rose seemed to handle the South Course, which got just about everyone in the opening round, with ease to grab a four-shot lead.

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    Rose went 5-under on his front nine in the second round, thanks to a huge eagle at the par-5 sixth. Rose stuck his second shot on the front of the green and then easily rolled in an 8-footer with ease.

    He did bogey once on Friday, but immediately offset it with another birdie. Rose then birdied the final two holes to get to 17-under, thanks in part to an absolute dart he landed on the iconic par-5 18th. That broke his own 36-hole record at the event.

    “That was two special rounds of golf,” Rose said. “Today probably even more so just given it’s hard to often follow up a low one.”

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    Rose has won 12 times on Tour in his career, most recently in a playoff at the FedEx St. Jude Championship last fall. Rose forced a playoff with Rory McIlroy at the Masters in April, too, but couldn’t quite pull off the upset win at Augusta National.

    Though he’s still got a ways to go to grab his first win of the season, Rose is in full control at the midway point. And he’s well on his way to surpassing the near-record 21-under he posted to win the event seven years ago.

    Yet even knowing where he’s at, Rose isn’t going to adjust a thing.

    “I felt like I was even thinking about it [late in my round] and I thought that actually, I don’t think anything changes. … You go out and play this golf course as it’s designed to be played,” he said. “There’s going to be pin placements that you can’t take on. You have to play it with some patience and respect, and you’re going to have to play well. You’re going to have to play from the fairway.

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    “So yeah, whether I was four back or four ahead, like, I don’t think it actually changes the task that much tomorrow.”

  • Where will Framber Valdez finally sign? Putting all 30 teams into tiers, from no chance to the favorites

    UPDATE: Framber Valdez and the Detroit Tigers reportedly agreed Feb. 4 on a 3-year, $115 million deal.

    Pitchers and catchers are due at spring training in less than two weeks, yet several of the top free-agent arms still don’t know which complex in Arizona or Florida they’ll be reporting to. Eight of the 18 starting pitchers on our Top 50 free agents list remain unsigned with February fast approaching. Chief among them is No. 8 overall and our top hurler in the class, left-hander Framber Valdez.

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    Over the past four seasons, Valdez ranks second in MLB in innings, behind only Logan Webb, and fifth in fWAR behind Zack Wheeler, Webb, Tarik Skubal and Kevin Gausman. Among 59 pitchers with at least 500 innings pitched during that span, Valdez’s 3.22 ERA ranks seventh, and his 3.29 FIP is ninth. His terrific sinker and top-notch curveball have consistently combined for elite groundball rates, which are clearly his headlining trait as a pitcher, rather than strikeout totals or pinpoint command.

    All of this has made Valdez a rotation staple for the Houston Astros during the back half of their dynastic run atop the American League, which has afforded him ample opportunities to pitch in October. He ranks sixth among active pitchers in postseason innings (85.0) and has delivered several stellar high-stakes starts along the way, including an eight-inning effort in the 2021 ALCS and two terrific outings in the 2022 World Series. His more recent showings in 2023 and 2024 weren’t quite as effective, but Valdez is unquestionably battle-tested, and that experience should appeal to teams.

    So what’s the hold up? Why would a pitcher of this caliber linger on the market this long? For starters, the number of teams willing to dole out a nine-figure deal was limited from the get-go. If Valdez and his representation are targeting a contract somewhere between what the two other top arms received (5 years, $130M for Ranger Suarez; 7 years, $210M for Dylan Cease), a wholly reasonable ask considering his track record, that immediately shrinks the pool of possible landing spots to almost exclusively big-market clubs.

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    Age is also paramount in free agency, and Valdez, who turned 32 in November, is two years older than Cease and Suarez. Teams might question how much longer Valdez will be in his prime, particularly with him coming off his worst season as a full-time rotation member. His 2025 wasn’t a bad campaign by any stretch, but unlike in each of the previous three seasons, Valdez didn’t receive any down-ballot Cy Young votes. He also finished poorly, posting a 5.20 ERA in the second half as Houston missed the postseason for the first time since 2016.

    There’s also speculation that the cross-up incident in September involving his catcher, Cesar Salazar, has made some teams wary of Valdez’s character. Whether that’s a driving factor behind the hesitance to sign him is unknown, but it’s worth noting that Valdez and his agency made it a priority early in free agency to communicate to clubs about the pitcher’s makeup, crafting a video that helps tell his story and highlights his reputation as a positive presence off the field, beyond what he brings on the mound.

    Whatever the exact confluence of reasons that brought us to this point, it’s hard to imagine Valdez will remain unsigned for much longer. So let’s survey the entire league and contemplate possible fits for the left-hander, organized into tiers from least to most likely landing spots.

    Not happening

    Teams: Brewers, Reds, Rockies, Twins, Cardinals, Pirates, Nationals, Athletics, Guardians, Rays, White Sox, Marlins

    Here we have a wide-ranging tier including contending teams, rebuilding teams, ascendent teams and tough-to-decipher teams. Some of these clubs could argue against signing Valdez based on the pitching personnel already in place or more urgent needs elsewhere on the roster.

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    More pertinently, this cohort shares the most relevant trait in any free-agency exercise: They represent the current dozen lowest payrolls in MLB, a natural distinction for determining which clubs are exceedingly unlikely to splurge on a premium free agent such as Valdez, especially one with a qualifying offer attached (beyond the financial considerations, small-market clubs are often particularly reluctant to forfeit draft picks). Even as we try to expand our horizons to consider potential sleepers for Valdez, any of these teams emerging to sign the southpaw would be downright stunning.

    No room, sorry

    Red Sox, Dodgers, Mariners, Blue Jays

    These four contenders with payrolls ranging from medium (Seattle) to high (Boston, Toronto) to astronomical (Los Angeles) are already loaded with rotation options that make signing Valdez illogical.

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    Decent fits but probably won’t pay up

    Tigers

    Maybe Detroit wins its arbitration hearing against Tarik Skubal and then, with added payroll clarity and flexibility, directs some funds to adding a formidable co-ace alongside Skubal (and perhaps a long-term replacement in the event Skubal departs next winter). That would be cool! But don’t count on it.

    Royals

    Kansas City’s rotation is already quite left-handed, but a trade of Kris Bubic for an offensive upgrade followed by a surprise signing of Valdez could transform the Royals into AL Central favorites. It’s an unlikely sequence but a fun scenario to ponder.

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    Angels

    If owner Arte Moreno wakes up tomorrow and decides he wants to sign a top free agent, as he has on several occasions throughout his tenure, Valdez could be an Angel. But nothing about the team’s offseason activity thus far suggests that is remotely likely.

    Rangers

    Texas’ trade for MacKenzie Gore indicates a preference to spend prospect capital rather than real dollars to add to its rotation. But if the Rangers were to shed their recently thrifty tendencies and pounce, Valdez could boost their rotation from strong to elite.

    Padres

    Valdez would be an awesome addition to a Padres rotation that is perilously thin even after they retained Michael King, but all indications are San Diego is still operating with significant budget limitations.

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    Diamondbacks

    The Snakes could definitely use rotation help, but as long as Zac Gallen also remains unsigned, Arizona bringing him back on a new deal feels more likely than the team forfeiting a draft pick and paying way more for a fresher face.

    Probably won’t happen, but they have the money (and maybe the need)

    Cubs, Yankees, Phillies

    There is an intriguing commonality among these three clubs: All three have frontline starters coming back from injury who likely won’t be ready to begin the season (Justin Steele in Chicago, Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón in New York, Zack Wheeler in Philadelphia). The Cubs (Edward Cabrera) and Yankees (Ryan Weathers) have already made trades to fortify their starting staffs to a degree, while Philadelphia appears content to hold down the fort with its internal options until Wheeler is back.

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    Is there still room — and time — for one of these big-market clubs to flex its financial muscles and add an impact starter anyway? Maybe!

    Probably won’t happen, but they did just employ him for a decade

    Astros

    It’s natural to circle back to the incumbent club when free agencies drag on, but at no point this offseason did it seem realistic that Valdez would stay in Houston, and the Astros have added several other arms (Tatsuya Imai, Mike Burrows, Ryan Weiss, Nate Pearson) in an effort to restock their rotation. A reunion here would be pretty shocking.

    The legitimate contenders

    Mets

    The recent acquisition of Freddy Peralta might’ve changed the calculus for New York in a possible pursuit of Valdez, as the need for a frontline starter is certainly lessened now. And you could also look at the current depth chart, which features a glut of rotation candidates, and argue that another major addition to the unit isn’t necessary. At the same time, Valdez would represent a sensible and exciting finish to New York’s dramatic offseason roster overhaul.

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    For all the buzz about Peralta and star rookie righty Nolan McLean, major questions persist about every other rotation candidate based on last season’s showings — and acting like McLean is a sure bet based on his limited sample might be risky. As one of the few teams with the kind of spending power to add impact talent regardless of an imperfect roster fit, the Mets shouldn’t be content with their current mound options, especially in the ultra-competitive NL East. David Stearns is reportedly reluctant to give out a long-term deal to any pitcher, but maybe owner Steve Cohen can enable a shorter-term, high-AAV offer to entice Valdez to come to Queens.

    Braves

    Atlanta has quietly spent a healthy chunk of change this offseason as it looks to bounce back from a miserable 2025, committing more than $100 million to seven free agents to help bolster the bullpen and lineup. The rotation, meanwhile, remains untouched.

    The Braves’ top four arms — Chris Sale, Spencer Schwellenbach, Spencer Strider and Reynaldo Lopez — are all wildly talented, but all have missed significant time due to injury in recent seasons. Adding Valdez, a workhorse who offers frontline upside, would be an excellent way to add some certainty to this fragile unit and is the kind of aggressive move that might be necessary if the Braves want to jump back into the NL East melee with the Phillies and Mets.

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    Giants

    The Giants continue to communicate that they are content with their rotation after the modest additions of Tyler Mahle and Adrian Houser, but the longer this drags on, the more San Francisco looks like the team that could benefit the most from finally opening up the wallet and adding a game-changer on the mound. The Giants’ starting staff currently ranks 22nd in projected fWAR, per FanGraphs’ Depth Charts. Adding Valdez — projected to be a top-15 MLB starter — could single-handedly vault them into the top half of rotations league-wide and significantly strengthen their case as a 2026 playoff team.

    Pairing Valdez with ace Logan Webb would also give them arguably the two best groundball pitchers in the sport, a duo that could thrive with terrific infielders Matt Chapman and Willy Adames playing behind them. The Cubs and Red Sox eventually quieted their critics by acting like the big-market clubs they are and making splashes in free agency, and there’s still time for the Giants to do the same. And unlike Chicago and Boston, who are coming off postseason appearances, San Francisco should have even more urgency to do so, considering its complete lack of relevance in the NL playoff picture since its outlier 107-win campaign in 2021.

    The consensus favorites

    Orioles

    This team has been the most obvious Valdez match for months. President of baseball operations Mike Elias has plenty of familiarity with Valdez, having been in Houston’s front office during his rise to the majors, and now Elias is heading an Orioles club that hasn’t been shy about its intentions to bolster its rotation this winter.

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    Trading for Shane Baz was an important step in that direction, but that move didn’t satisfy Baltimore’s need to acquire a pitcher it could feel confident giving the ball for a postseason start — and adding Valdez would. To be clear, this Orioles offseason should be considered a success even without Valdez, but adding the left-hander would emphatically punctuate a winter spent strengthening virtually every portion of the roster.

    Until Valdez signs elsewhere, this is the match we’ll be waiting to see come to fruition.

  • Former UCLA guard Amari Bailey, who’s played 10 NBA games, is reportedly seeking college eligibility

    The line between college and pro sports has never been more blurred, and Amari Bailey is reportedly up for testing its obscurity.

    The former UCLA guard, who was drafted by the Charlotte Hornets in the second round of the 2023 NBA Draft and then played 10 games on a two-way contract for the Hornets during the 2023-24 season, is seeking college eligibility.

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    No one has gone back to play in college after logging NBA minutes. His goal is to play one more season in the collegiate ranks, according to an ESPN report Friday.

    “Right now I’d be a senior in college,” the soon-to-be-22-year-old Bailey told ESPN. “I’m not trying to be 27 years old playing college athletics. No shade to the guys that do; that’s their journey. But I went to go play professionally and learned a lot, went through a lot. So, like, why not me?”

    Bailey has reportedly hired an agent and a lawyer and is prepared to challenge the NCAA in court. He explained to ESPN that he has some regrets about leaving UCLA after his freshman season, during which he averaged 11.2 points, 3.8 rebounds and 2.2 assists per game in 2022-23.

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    That season, the Bruins won 31 games and reached the Sweet 16. Bailey was the fourth-leading scorer on a squad that featured Miami Heat first-round pick Jaime Jaquez Jr.

    He arrived at UCLA as a five-star prospect from Sierra Canyon, where he teamed up with Bronny James and other high-profile prospects outside of Los Angeles. Bailey was the No. 12 overall recruit in the 2022 class, according to Rivals.

    After his rookie season with the Hornets, he signed with the Brooklyn Nets but spent the 2024-25 season in the G League. He was cut this past summer, according to ESPN.

    “It’s not a stunt,” Bailey said, per ESPN. “I’m really serious about going back. I just want to improve my game, change the perception of me and just show that I can win.”

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    Last month, in the wake of 2023 second-round pick James Nnaji joining Baylor, NCAA president Charlie Baker insisted the NCAA “has not and will not grant eligibility to any prospective or returning student-athletes who have signed an NBA contract (including a two-way contract).”

    Nnaji, a 21-year-old 7-foot center from Makurdi, Nigeria, never signed an NBA contract. Instead, he remained in the FC Barcelona organization, although he did play in NBA Summer League games for the Hornets and New York Knicks, as recently as last year for the Knicks.

    Nnaji’s arrival at Baylor has been overshadowed recently by another 7-footer, Charles Bediako, and his return to Alabama. Bediako, 23, hadn’t played for the Crimson Tide since the 2022-23 campaign. He went undrafted after that season and ultimately embarked on a G League stint. He did, however, sign a two-way contract with the San Antonio Spurs in 2023.

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    Last week, a judge granted a temporary restraining order to allow Bediako to return to Alabama and play for the Crimson Tide.

    Bailey heard his name called in the draft 10 picks after Nnaji, and he signed the same type of contract as Bediako.

    Bailey believes playing 65 NBA minutes shouldn’t differentiate him from those two players. He’s aiming to join a college team for next season, per ESPN, which reported the potential team would have to petition the NCAA for a waiver to permit him to play.

    If denied that waiver, Bailey and his legal team could file a lawsuit.

  • Vikings GM losing job against backdrop of Sam Darnold’s Super Bowl berth seems directly related — but Kwesi Adofo-Mensah’s decision wasn’t that wild

    Mere months after the Minnesota Vikings hired Kwesi Adofo-Mensah as general manager and Kevin O’Connell as head coach, I sat down with each during their offseason practices to better understand their philosophy.

    I learned about their visions for elevating the talent on their roster and their beliefs about the threshold of talent required to win a championship.

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    Discussions, particularly with Adofo-Mensah, turned to his philosophy around quarterback.

    “I’ll be frank: The one asset where you get nervous about not burning it down is quarterback,” he told me in May 2022, because teams are “more likely to win” the Super Bowl “if you have that quarterback.”

    Then he added: “It’s very unlikely to have that quarterback.”

    With the Vikings firing Adofo-Mensah on Friday after four seasons and an additional four-week delay, those sentiments are worth revisiting.

    Because going forward, NFL decision-makers may re-examine the decision Adofo-Mensah made and pivot in another direction. But a year ago, the Vikings’ GM followed a decision-making path that was common in the NFL: Trying to avoid overpaying a player at a key position if they didn’t believe that player could take them to the Super Bowl.

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    When the Vikings decided last March not to re-sign quarterback Sam Darnold, they factored in multiple variables.

    SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - NOVEMBER 30: Sam Darnold #14 of the Seattle Seahawks and Justin Jefferson #18 of the Minnesota Vikings embrace after the game at Lumen Field on November 30, 2025 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jane Gershovich/Getty Images)

    Sam Darnold shares a moment with former teammate Justin Jefferson after a Seattle victory on Nov. 30, 2025. (Photo by Jane Gershovich/Getty Images)

    (Jane Gershovich via Getty Images)

    There was, of course, 2024 10th overall pick J.J. McCarthy in the building, and he was expected to fully rehabilitate before the season’s start.

    There was also, the Vikings believed, a chance to keep the quarterback whom they’d signed in November when he became available: former New York Giants starter Daniel Jones.

    And then there was the philosophy of Adofo-Mensah, who believed in a threshold of championship talent.

    “If you don’t have [that threshold], you don’t win — that’s very binary,” Adofo-Mensah said during the 2022 OTAs sit-down. “The way you can screw up in this job is deceiving yourself that you’re there.”

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    [Get more Vikings news: Minnesota team feed]

    Adofo-Mensah’s discussion of a talent threshold may have been cast in more quantitative language than that of most NFL decision-makers. But his reasoning and philosophies resembled those which teams had preached for decades.

    Realism about a team’s place in the competitive lifecycle is integral, coaches and executives often admit off the record and occasionally on it (see: the Cleveland Browns’ statement this week when hiring head coach Todd Monken). And the most important position, they say often, is quarterback.

    Adofo-Mensah agreed with that. He believed in maintaining draft picks to increase the chances of finding the next Patrick Mahomes or Tom Brady. And he worried about going all in on a quarterback who had not proven to be that ultimate winner.

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    So when Darnold had one very good season last year, to follow six NFL seasons with nowhere near that level of success, the Vikings were not ready to ignore their high draft pick.

    Adofo-Mensah reflected on that in a Jan. 13 interview with Vikings reporters, discussing how he’d stay up at night wondering about the process. But ultimately, as he said, disappointing results don’t always mean the process was poor.

    “It’s easier to go and be revisionist and results-based, but going to really think through what we had at the time, I still understand why we did what we did,” Adofo-Mensah said earlier this month. “In my conversation with Kevin, just doing the analysis we’ve done, we’ve set a standard here for winning when we’ve gotten a certain level of play in that position, allowing us to be explosive enough on offense to set the table for how we play defense, special teams and things like that.

    “So our conversation is about returning the room to a competitive, deep-enough standpoint to get that play style, that ability to win games.”

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    Darnold, whom the New York Jets selected third overall in 2018, posted his career-best year in the process, completing 66.2% of his pass attempts for 4,319 yards, 35 touchdowns and 12 interceptions.

    The Vikings won 14 games in that process, but they also lost their regular-season finale and wild-card game. In those two games, Darnold completed 53% of his 81 pass attempts and threw one touchdown to one interception. In the playoff loss to the Los Angeles Rams, he absorbed nine sacks.

    So the Vikings decided not to offer the three-year, $100.5 million payday the Seattle Seahawks did. Seattle gave Darnold $37.5 million guaranteed at signing and $55 million in total guarantees, per Spotrac.

    MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - OCTOBER 20: Kwesi Adofo-Mensah general manager of the Minnesota Vikings looks on before the game against the Detroit Lions at U.S. Bank Stadium on October 20, 2024 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

    Under general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, the Vikings went to the playoffs twice in four seasons. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

    (Stephen Maturen via Getty Images)

    Minnesota also lost Jones when the Indianapolis Colts paid him $13 million with the chance to start. Jones led the Colts to an 8-5 start before tearing his Achilles, completing 68% of his passes for 3,101 yards, 19 touchdowns and 8 interceptions.

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    The Vikings made a key firing right after two men at the position he was most tasked with fixing succeeded elsewhere. That influenced the decision to move on. But this dismissal is not as simple as a one-year quarterback failure. And it’s not as simple as a firing on the basis of Darnold advancing to the Super Bowl.

    “It’s not about any one decision or move,” team owner Mark Wilf said Friday after the team announced Adofo-Mensah’s dismissal. “We looked at the decision cumulatively. We just didn’t feel confident going through the entirety of the offseason, an additional draft and free agency with this structure.

    “We have an urgency to create a winning football team and establish sustainable success.”

    The Seahawks showed this season that a quarterback without All-Pro histories, a track record of playoff wins and a cemented place in the top tier of the position in the league can, indeed, make it to the Super Bowl.

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    The recipe is leaning not only on the quarterback but also on a strong run game, excellent scheme and top-tier defense. The recipe also included giving a quarterback time to develop: Darnold is succeeding with his fifth team in his seventh NFL season. He’s succeeding in his third year learning the Shanahan-McVay system.

    The Vikings can remind themselves that McCarthy is only one year into playing and two into learning the principles.

    His story is not yet closed.

    And while Adofo-Mensah’s successor, like most NFL general managers, may wonder if he should worry about not burning down the quarterback position, Darnold will be a glaring reminder that players given time, and plans given a chance, can succeed just as a superhuman like Mahomes, who waited behind Alex Smith his rookie year.

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    “We understand there will be questions on the timing and why now,” Wilf said Friday. “I think you know how we want to operate as owners. We want to avoid knee-jerk reactions, be pragmatic, thoughtful, methodical making these decisions.”

    Perhaps the Vikings then will be pragmatic, thoughtful and methodical with their next decision at quarterback.

  • Lakers’ Luka Dončić records triple-double in first half during blowout 142-111 win over Wizards

    The Washington Wizards likely would’ve preferred for Luka Dončić to sit out Friday’s game to give his sore left ankle a rest.

    Instead, the Los Angeles Lakers’ star played against the Wizards after being listed as questionable earlier in the day on the NBA’s injury report due to left ankle soreness. And he was explosive from the game’s opening tip of a 142-111 win.

    Dončić scored 11 of the Lakers’ first 20 points and assisted on two Deandre Ayton baskets on his way to finishing the first quarter with 17 points, 7 rebounds and 7 assists as the Lakers scored 41 points in the opening 12 minutes.

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    By halftime, he already had a triple-double with 26 points, 10 rebounds and 11 assists as the Lakers went to the locker room with a 77-48 lead. Oh, and he only played 19 minutes in the first half.

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    Demonstrating that it was simply his night, Dončić posed after making a lob pass to Jaxson Hayes (before Hayes even finished the dunk) and banked in a 3-pointer for the Lakers’ final score of the second quarter. Lakers coach JJ Redick wasn’t too impressed by the bank shot during his halftime interview, however.

    “Sometimes, he gets bored. So it did not surprise me,” Redick said on the Spectrum SportsNet broadcast. “He did not call it, though.”

    Dončić insisted after the game that he intended to bank the shot in, however.

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    He hrottled down in the second half, sitting out the entire fourth quarter with the Lakers holding a big lead. Dončić finished with 37 points, 11 rebounds, 13 assists and 3 steals. The NBA’s leading scorer has tallied 30 points or more in seven of his past 10 games.

    By the end of the game, it was Bronny James who entertained the fans at Capital One Arena with a breakway dunk from a steal by Jake LaRivia.

    Prior to that, LeBron James gave the fans a highlight with a reverse dunk on a lob pass from Marcus Smart.

    The elder James scored 20 points, while Bronny tallied four. Ayton added 28 points (his second-highest total of the season) with 13 rebounds, while Rui Hachimura provided 11 points off the bench.

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    [Get more Lakers news: Los Angeles team feed]

    The Lakers have won of five of their past seven games and improved to 29-18 as they wrestle with the Phoenix Suns for the No. 6 spot in the Western Conference. Los Angeles continues its eight-game road trip with a Sunday primetime matchup against the New York Knicks.

    For the Wizards (12-35), Malaki Branham scored a team-high 17 points. Alex Sarr followed with 16 points, 6 rebounds and 5 assists, while Kyshawn George and Bub Carrington each scored 13 points. Washington next hosts the equally struggling Sacramento Kings (12-37) on Sunday.