Andrew Siciliano deep dives on the 2026 NFL Draft with Nate Tice & ESPN’s Matt Miller. Andrew kicks things off with Nate Tice as they parse through Nate & Charles McDonald’s latest mock draft and cover a few of the more interesting selections, including EDGE Rueben Bain Jr. going second overall to the New York Jets, RB Jeremiyah Love in the top ten, EDGE David Bailey to the Washington Commanders and more. Next, Andrew & Nate set their sites on Indianapolis for the NFL Combine as Nate gives his top prospects he’s most excited to watch test next week.
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Later, Andrew is joined by ESPN’s Matt Miller to get his thoughts on the draft (including Ty Simpson, Caleb Downs and more) before talking through his latest NFL mock draft.
(6:55) – Nate Tice breaks down latest NFL mock draft
(21:55) – Nate’s top prospects to watch at the NFL Combine
(44:00) – Matt Miller talks latest NFL mock draft
MIAMI GARDENS, FLORIDA – JANUARY 19: Fernando Mendoza #15 of the Indiana Hoosiers takes the field during pregame warmups before the 2026 CFP National Championship between the Indiana Hoosiers and the Miami Hurricanes at Hard Rock Stadium on January 19, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida. (Photo by CFP/Getty Images)
(Photo by CFP/Getty Images)
Inside Coverage would be nothing without the impact of our beloved Terez Paylor, who was a pillar of Yahoo Sports’ NFL editorial and podcast coverage. We will continue to produce this NFL podcast in his honor, and hope that you can support Terez Paylor’s legacy in one of three ways:
• Buy an “All-Juice Team” hoodie or tee from BreakingT.com/Terez. All profits directly fund the Terez A. Paylor scholarship at Howard University.
• Donate directly at giving.howard.edu/givenow. Under “Tribute,” please note that your gift is made in memory of Terez A. Paylor. Under “Designation,” click on “Other” and write in “Terez A. Paylor Scholarship.”
The Cooligans welcome former MLS head coach and analyst Giovanni Savarese for a deep dive into the 2026 MLS season. Gio shares his predictions, breakout teams to watch, and how the league continues to evolve ahead of a massive 2026 on home soil. The conversation also turns to the USMNT, as the guys assess expectations, pressure, and what success should realistically look like at the 2026 World Cup.
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Christian and Alexis then tackle the troubling racist incident involving Vinícius Júnior during Real Madrid’s clash with Benfica. They unpack how these situations are currently handled, question whether the responsibility to stop a match unfairly falls on the player experiencing abuse, and debate what meaningful structural changes could better protect players moving forward.
Finally, it’s a jam-packed Champions League recap. Folarin Balogun shines in a statement performance against Paris Saint-Germain, Juventus suffer a shocking defeat to Galatasaray, and Bodø/Glimt pull off a stunning win over Inter Milan. The boys react to all the drama, surprises, and what these results mean going forward.
Timestamps:
(6:30) – 2026 MLS preview and predictions
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(30:00) – Gio Savarese’s USMNT World Cup outlook
(39:00) – Vinicius Junior deals with racism again: time for a rule change?
(59:00) – Folarin Balogun shines in Champions League loss to PSG
(1:04:30) – Serie A teams suffer shocking Champions League losses
Microsoft has announced that its rolling out support for streaming games at 1440p on Xbox consoles. Game streaming is a key benefit of paying for a Game Pass subscription, and as of 2025, now also includes games players own that aren’t part of the larger Game Pass library.
The higher bitrate streaming option will let subscribers with an Xbox Series X or S, Xbox One X or Xbox One play their games at a higher resolution, provided the game and their display supports it. Microsoft previously only offered 1440p streams on select Fire TVs, LG TVs, Samsung TVs, web browsers and the Xbox PC app. At least for now, 1440p is only available to Game Pass Ultimate subscribers.
Beyond the new streaming option, Microsoft is also making improvements to the Xbox PC app and the Xbox experience on ROG Xbox Ally handhelds. On PC, the Xbox PC app now includes “navigation sounds” that play when you use the app’s interface with a controller. These new sounds are supposed to make controller input feel more responsive and intuitive. On the ASUS ROG Xbox Ally and Xbox Ally X, meanwhile, Microsoft is making it even easier to format removable storage like microSD cards, and updating drivers to improve compatibility on select games.
The last week has been particularly tumultuous for Microsoft’s gaming division. Former Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer announced his retirement on Friday, alongside the appointment of Asha Sharma, the President of Microsoft’s CoreAI division, as his replacement. Opinions differ as to whether Sharma’s new position will be good or bad for Xbox, but more changes are likely on the way.
[This story contains major spoilers from the third season of The Night Agent.]
Genesis Rodriguez did not quite know what she was signing up for when she agreed to play financial journalist Isabel de Leon in the third season of Netflix‘s The Night Agent.
Fresh off a stint in the second season of Taylor Sheridan’s spy thriller Lioness, where played a U.S. Army pilot, Rodriguez had to switch gears to play a whipsmart woman whose investigative reporting reveals that her own flesh and blood is at the center of a government conspiracy. “It’s jarring. I went from this very tough, physical character [in Lioness] to a very cerebral character [in Night Agent],” Rodriguez previously told The Hollywood Reporter when shooting the newly released third season of Night Agent in Istanbul back in December 2024. “I love a challenge.”
At that point, Rodriguez was still largely in the dark about her character’s connection to the central plot of season three. Midway through the season, protagonist Peter Sutherland (Gabriel Basso), much like the rest of the audience, discovers that Isabel is actually the estranged daughter of Jacob Monroe (Louis Herthum), the ruthless intelligence broker with whom Peter struck a deal at the end of season two to thwart a terrorist attack on the UN building in New York.
A rising reporter for The Financial Register in New York, Isabel secretly travelled to Istanbul at the start of the season to meet with fugitive FinCEN analyst Jay Batra (Suraj Sharma) and receive classified evidence of a massive stateside money-laundering operation that funded a deadly terrorist attack on a civilian airliner. This evidence places her in the crosshairs of a powerful network, including corrupt banker Freya Myers (Michaela Watkins), an unnamed assassin played by Stephen Moyer, and a shady businessman who happens to be her old man. Teaming up with Peter, Isabel begins to connect the financial dots between the domestic shell companies owned by her father and President Richard Hagan (Ward Horton).
Through a series of revelations and flashbacks, Isabel discovers that her mother, Sofia (Daniela Peña), was a casualty of her biological father’s past life as a CIA mole in the ’90s. Sofia died in prison years ago while Monroe chose to protect himself. Despite this painful history, Monroe’s lingering paternal instinct becomes a catalyst for the plot; he ultimately agrees to tear down his criminal empire and cooperate with Peter specifically to ensure Isabel’s safety. In the end, however, Monroe is shot point blank in the head by Peter’s new partner, Adam (David Lyons), who turns out to be President Hagan’s former commanding officer in the military and was installed as a Night Agent to carry out orders specifically on behalf of the corrupt POTUS.
Following Monroe’s death, which she believed was not a staged suicide, Isabel realizes that the key to the massive database of criminal evidence that would bring down her father’s entire criminal enterprise is hidden inside a sentimental copy of Grimm’s Fairy Tales. By decoding this book cipher, she unlocks the proof needed to take down the conspiracy. In the high-stakes finale, she survives an attack by the President’s rogue agents and successfully broadcasts a live interview — with Myers going on the record — that exposes the First Family’s criminal conduct to the world, providing a sense of closure for her family’s tragic past while holding the most powerful people in the country accountable.
“It’s so brave to throw yourself under the bus or throw everybody under the bus because the truth and her moral compass is so strong that that’s the most important thing above anything. ‘Let it all burn down,’” Rodriguez now tells THR in an interview about the third season, which released Jan. 19. “It’s very poignant. It’s very relevant to today’s world. I think journalists — and playing a journalist right now — are very important, and there are people out in real life trying to get the truth out there and risking it all.”
Below, Rodriguez offers her take on Isabel and Monroe’s fractured yet loving relationship, why she never saw Isabel and Peter’s relationship as anything more than platonic — and what viewers can expect from the next season of Sheridan’s Lioness, which she says will wrap production very shortly.
***
Once you landed this role, what do you remember from your earliest conversations with creator and showrunner Shawn Ryan about Isabel’s arc in the third season? Did you know who she really was?
I had no idea who she turned out to be until I was shooting, which is really cool because I was kind of discovering with the audience. I honestly feel it was good that way because I don’t think Isabel really cared about his backstory. It was the present relationship she had with him that informed the way she went about him. It was a tough position for her because, at the end of the day, he is her father. And always underneath all the resentment and abandonment is a love there. So it was a very tough, layered thing we had to pull off of having to [believably] turn in your father when you don’t have a great relationship with him. [We wanted] her search for the truth to be the thing that drives her. I think she’s a very special person who puts her morals and integrity above everything — above a relationship with her own father.
You mentioned that you did not know her true identity until you were shooting. At what point during filming did you learn that she was the estranged daughter of Monroe?
I learned after episode three. So here I was investigating [a shell company called] CorePoint Dynamics. I knew it had something to do with my father, but I didn’t know how. I think she didn’t know much about him. So in a way, she was just investigating where he got his money and how he made his money. It didn’t make sense to her. And especially with the way she went about journalism in general, she said, “Always follow the money.” It’s a different approach to how she would [normally] get to the truth and how she feels like justice would be served. So I think [her arc] was, in a weird way, to get to the bottom of who her father is because he never really shared that with her.
One thing I have come to appreciate about this show is how cultural details for the characters of color have been woven into the last couple of seasons — the Iranian storyline in season two, and now Isabel’s bicultural upbringing between the U.S. and Mexico in season three. You’re Venezuelan and Cuban, but did you ever have any conversations with Shawn about weaving in any cultural details for Isabel?
I personally love the episode where they flash back just to give you the whole point of view of how she grew up. I honestly feel like Shawn did such a good job at bringing in so much backstory that really it was easy for me to tap into bringing this to life — to be someone that comes to the States to better themselves, to chase a dream. That is this country’s story, and there are so many people like this. I’m a child of immigrants. It’s easy to tap into this and to straddle two cultures. It’s what I grew up with. So just by being open to the words, but also he was extremely open to everything that I had to say about things — it was just a very collaborative environment when it came to forming and sculpting this character.
Gabriel Basso as Peter Sutherland in The Night Agent season three.
So much of this season is built on this unlikely new alliance between Peter and Isabel. They begin on a more antagonistic note, but episode four definitely reveals a new side of that dynamic as they confide in each other about their personal lives — and Peter even risks his own life to save Isabel’s. Why do you think Isabel brings herself to immediately and implicitly trust Peter, even as she worries about her own journalistic credibility being called into question?
I think when people are put in danger, and they are put in danger together and he so easily stepped up to protect her, that creates a bond. But what I love about their relationship is that the romance isn’t even a question. It’s two people with the same idea, the same journey of doing the right thing. They’re experts at what they do in their own way, and both of them complement each other. She’s so cerebral and skilled in researching and going down the rabbit hole, and he’s so good at connecting the dots in real time and so instinctual. They have two different expertise that come together for the same thing. And not only that, it’s also refreshing that a male and a female can have a friendship on television where she teases him the entire time and he allows for it. It’s refreshing to see that for these two characters.
When I spoke with Shawn Ryan about the third season, he told me it was never his intention to lean into any kind of romance between Peter and Isabel, but some viewers still believed that Isabel was being set up as some kind of love interest for Peter. Did you, at any point, see the potential there, even if you were excited about the prospect of them being just friends?
I don’t think so. I certainly don’t think we played it like that. The words didn’t lend for romance. It lent for trust, and led to a friendship. Especially because she was so sure of herself at the cabin in the pool episode [episode four]. She’s like, “Okay, what’s your deal? You haven’t looked at me sideways. Not once. Every guy looks at me sideways. What’s your problem?” (Laughs.) And it was just so refreshing to see that he can’t have that [romantic relationship] and have his job, and do what his journey is meant to do. I really enjoyed that it wasn’t that. It’s very hard to come into a third season, and people are already comparing you to someone else. I don’t feel like I’m filling a void; It’s like an own little separate thing. So that was kind of alleviating.
Isabel keeps telling Monroe throughout the season that she can’t trust him. At one point, she says, “I don’t know what’s a negotiating point or what’s not, not even with your cancer diagnosis. And now you want me to play like I’m a good daughter. Like you never abandoned my mother and me. I want my father in my life… but you need to earn it.” Do you think there is any world in which Isabel would have been able to trust Jacob, or would she have always resented her for abandoning her and her mother and then trying to buy her love?
I absolutely believe if Monroe would’ve led with the truth, despite what her judgment would’ve been like, she would’ve been open at least [to a relationship]. But the man didn’t know how to not lie, even to protect her. He just couldn’t help himself. I feel like her little token that she got was that he did love her, despite the fact he was never open with her. That is something she would have to deal with once she decodes everything and sees that her mom meant a lot to him, and the story that she had told herself wasn’t entirely true. What’s sad, though, is that there was really no real closure. There is a closure about who he was and that he did love her, but they never had the chance to really have a relationship.
One of the standout moments of the season for me was when Isabel, who intentionally chose not to have a heartfelt goodbye with her father, learns that he has died suddenly. Can you give voice to what is going through her head as she attempts to process that news?
I think it’s the loss of the relationship that could have been. It’s the loss of the only living parent that you had. Despite not getting along with them, you’re still going to miss that parent. Even if they disappointed you, even if they broke your heart, now you don’t have anybody. I think she was more so mourning what could have been. And when you get a chance to play those things, it’s so fun because it’s so complex. There’s so many different emotions that are battling within you that you get to interpret. I’m happy you were happy with that scene, but obviously you lose some sleep before you do it. (Laughs.) You’re like, “God, I hope that I got this right.”
Shortly after processing the news, Isabel insists she wants nothing to do with her father anymore. Do you think there is a part of Isabel that still loved her father, even after he was killed? Do you think she only said that to the people around her as a way to suppress her own grief?
Absolutely. Throughout the entire storyline, she loved her father. No matter who that person is, or who they turn out to be, you’re still looking for validation and love from your parent. You could be 80 years old and still living that way. I absolutely believe that she loved him — and continued to love him. Even despite turning him in and all these things, that was the underneath of it all. That’s what made it so hard because he had a cancer diagnosis. There were so many things she wanted from him that he couldn’t even tell her. There was just no way to have a relationship the way that he was presenting it.
After the FinCEN scandal involving the POTUS comes to light, Isabel chooses not to reveal Peter’s involvement with Monroe in her reporting. She tells Peter, “You were the only one who made a deal with my father who was actually trying to help people. You weren’t the story.” What exactly do you think she has learned from working with him?
What she discovers is that not everyone is black and white, that sometimes you have to do certain things to do the right thing. I think she can accept that because of her relationship with Peter, because underneath she saw his heart and who he was and why he was doing certain things. And for her, she definitely changed after her relationship with Peter because in the beginning for her, it was always black and white and there was room for grey. She finally sees that by the end.
The last time we see Isabel onscreen, she tells Peter she is going to Barcelona for a few months to try to find some balance in her life. Is this the last we’ve seen of Isabel, or have you had any discussions with Shawn about the character coming back in a future season?
I’d absolutely love to come back. The door is definitely open, so I hope there is a storyline in the future where that could happen.
You spent the last few months shooting the third season of Lioness. How far into production are you right now, and what are the new layers you have found in playing Josie this time around?
We’re about to finish season three. It’s interesting that the two characters I’m playing have some daddy issues. (Laughs.) We’re having fun. We are just bringing in another packed season. I think it comes out later this year.So I guess spoiling without spoiling, she’s obviously back for season three. You see her in the dynamic within the QRF now, and how she fits into the dynamic now. When you saw her, she was kind of this outsider who wasn’t accepted by the QRF, and now she’s a part of the team. And obviously, there is the whole “Crusie” [a portmanteau of Rodriguez’s Josie and Laysla De Oliveira’s Cruz Manuelos] situation happening. And that “Crusie” is still cruising!
[This story contains spoilers for Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die.]
Haley Lu Richardson is a true original. You will struggle to find another actor who is so authentically themselves in every facet of the entertainment business. You also won’t find a more varied portfolio of brand new work than hers.
Richardson is currently on the big screen in Gore Verbinski‘s Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die, a sci-fi comedy that gives artificial intelligence the roasting it rightly deserves. She also just premiered Zi, her third independent drama with Kogonada, at Sundance. You can also catch her alongside Emilia Clarke in the Peacock streaming series, Ponies, where she and Clarke play widows who step in for their deceased CIA operative husbands during the late ‘70s portion of the Cold War. Last but not least, Richardson and her childhood best friend, Lily Kravetz, just put out a poetry book called I’m Sad and Horny, chronicling “the chaos of being a twenty-something girl in this world.”
In Don’t Die, the Arizona native routinely steals scenes as Ingrid, a party princess with electromagnetic sensitivity. It’s an impressive feat when you consider that she’s acting opposite Oscar winner Sam Rockwell and the likes of Zazie Beetz, Michael Pena and Juno Temple. Her character’s allergy to mobile phones and Wi-Fi has made human connection all the more difficult, so Richardson took inspiration from a singer-songwriter who’s become a defining voice for those who feel isolated and heartbroken.
“Honestly, Phoebe [Bridgers] is a crucial part of the emotional, physical, psychological development in my life,” Richardson tells The Hollywood Reporter. “I would love to collaborate one day. I was very much inspired by Phoebe for Ingrid — her energy, her mannerisms, her stance, her hair. We had a picture of Phoebe up in the hair and makeup trailer as one of our inspirations.”
As the author of I’m Sad and Horny, Richardson did not realize that Bridgers concocted a viral tweet during the pandemic that said, “Finished Normal People and now I’m sad and horny …” Series co-lead, Paul Mescal, then responded, “I’m officially dead.” And in another relevant twist of fate, Bridgers shot back, “No, don’t die …”
“Oh my God, I did not know about that. I’m feeling mixed emotions right now because I’m such a Phoebe fan,” Richardson says. “Phoebe’s music makes me sad and horny, and it has really helped me accept my sadness inside. So it’s actually crazy to hear that she tweeted that. Maybe I’m just really in tune with her, or maybe she’s inspired me so much that I think like her now.”
In Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die, Richardson and Rockwell’s characters have a very unique relationship on screen, one that is explored via the Q&A below in spoiler-y detail. The two actors also got to share a memorable moment together off camera when Rockwell asked Richardson to help him read his now-famous The White Lotusmonologue scene at a point when he was still on the fence about accepting the job. Richardson, who starred on season two of Mike White’s smash hit HBO series, essentially stood-in for Walton Goggins’ character. The latter’s eventual response to the brutally honest speech spawned some of the most hilarious reaction shots in recent memory. But it turns out that Richardson may have given Rockwell the nudge he needed to commit to season three.
“I remember sitting in his trailer when he asked, ‘Would you run this scene with me?’ I obviously know how far [creator] Mike [White] will go with his White Lotus characters, but I was shocked when I heard Sam’s big monologue,” Richardson recalls. “I was like, ‘What is Mike on?’ So I read it with Sam, and he was still deciding if he wanted to do it for sure. He was like, ‘I don’t know, man. Are people going to think I’m a creep? Is this too much?’ And I was like, ‘Sam, I think you really have to do this.’”
Below, during a wide-ranging conversation with THR, Richardson also discusses why she went “method-lite” for her Don’t Die character, as well as why she’s still optimistic about the arts in the AI era.
***
I’m sorry you have to spend Valentine’s Day on Zoom with me, especially while you’re in Berlin.
Well, for this interview, we can be each other’s valentines.
Deal. Between the airplane message in Silicon Valley and you doing headstands on the Berlinale carpet, Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die’s marketing has reached a whole new level.
(Laughs.) I don’t know what happened to all of us yesterday. It’s definitely a wild, batshit, unhinged movie, and we’re also like that in a lot of ways. Gore [Verbinski] and I definitely are. So our energies combined with the energy of the movie, and we were just unhinged yesterday.
Gore Verbinski, Haley Lu Richardson, Sam Rockwell, Zazie Beetz and Michael Peña pose at the Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die photocall during the 76th Berlinale International Film Festival Berlin at Grand Hyatt Hotel on Feb. 13.
Arturo Holmes/Getty Images
There was some peer pressure?
I’ve never felt more energy from the photographers on a red carpet or press line or photo call or whatever they’re called than the photographers here at [Berlinale]. You do one thing that’s wacky or untraditional, and they are like, “Do it 20 times now! Do it again, but on your head!” I fall easily into the trap of “dance monkey,” but I had fun doing it. I can’t help who I am. I’ve surrendered to it at 30. This is the way I am for better or worse.
I’ve been wondering why you weren’t in Kogonada’s A Big Bold Beautiful Journey. I thought you’d be in all his movies. Besides there not being an optimal role for you, is it because Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die shot at the same time?
Did it?
Yeah, according to the internet, both began shooting in April 2024.
Actually, I do remember texting with Kogonada while we were both filming, but no one asked me to be in A Big Bold Beautiful Journey. And it’s okay. I forgive him.
Perhaps you could’ve played the bride at the wedding Margot Robbie and Colin Farrell meet at, but it’s such a brief part that maybe Kogonada didn’t feel like it’d be worth your time.
At one point, I had sent a headshot to Kogonada, and I think [Columbus co-star] Rory Culkin did as well. Our headshots were going to be a little Easter egg in the scene where [Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Kevin Klein] send Colin on his way, but I guess he cut them out. [Writer’s Note: Richardson proceeds to have a coughing fit that becomes a running joke the rest of the interview.] Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Choke to Death. I literally started choking on my own breath and words. Thank you for bearing with me.
Of course. I’m guessing Zi more than made up for your Big Bold absence?
Yes, Zi was the perfect experience to have with someone like Kogonada, and it was also just a gift of a creative experience in general. I don’t know if you know about the nature of how it all started and came to be, but it was pretty unique and independent and amazing.
All I know is that it was a response to all the rigamarole he experienced on Big Bold. He wanted to get back to something pure and without a lot of fanfare.
Well, in the decade since we met on Columbus, we’ve maintained this beautiful friendship and respect for one another. Every time we meet for lunch or coffee or talk on the phone, we’d both share stories from what we’ve been working on and how we’re growing as artists and as people. Some of them have been a part of the big machine of the industry. It has its upsides and positive challenges, but it also has its soul-crushing bits that definitely distract from the reason why we both really love to tell stories.
For the last few years, he’s been talking about wanting to do something that’s just truly independent and pure with a very small group. I’ve been waiting for it to be the right time and for him to have the spark of an idea, and then he asked me to come to Hong Kong [in October 2025]. I ended up learning a lot because all we had were our instincts, and that takes an immense amount of trust in your collaborators. It also really connected me to trusting myself more, which is super valuable in life and specifically with acting.
I can’t wait to see it. Were you able to read the Don’t Die script without your reps giving away the major spoiler in the movie?
Yeah, no one spoiled it for me. They were all really excited for me to read it because a great script, unfortunately, is rare to come across. My mom read it before me too. She read it the day that it was sent to me, and she was like, “Haley, I’m not going to tell you anything about it, but I know you’re going to want to do it. You need to read this right away.” So I listened to my mother, and she was right. Then I manifested that Gore would let me do it, and he did.
Asim Chaudhry, Juno Temple, Michael Pena, Sam Rockwell, Zazie Beetz, Haley Lu Richardson in Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die
Courtesy of Briarcliff Entertainment
We’ll touch on the spoiler later. Does your mom usually function as your script filter/personal reader?
My mom reads all my scripts and sends me emails titled, “Mom’s two cents.” She actually has incredible instincts. She’s right 98 percent of the time. It’s pretty cute and pretty helpful.
Your character, Ingrid, has electromagnetic hypersensitivity. She’s allergic to technology, especially cell phones and Wi-Fi. Thus, she’s a rent-a-princess for young kids’ outdoor birthday parties because they generally don’t have phones yet. Has this character and this movie altered your screen time at all?
She definitely did while we were filming. I went method-lite and deleted Instagram for the few months we were in South Africa. I also never brought my phone to work. So instead of having four to six hours of screen time a day, I had maybe 15 to 30 minutes, and that was a really amazing, inspiring reset. Since then, I’ve definitely gone through phases where I’m sucked into the vortex. And next thing I know, three weeks of my life goes by and a third of it was spent on the phone doing shit.
Part of what drew me to the themes of this movie and specifically to Ingrid was the fact that I’ve always had this awareness/deep resistance to social media in general. I do love my Instagram, and it does suck me in, but I definitely value being present and living my life so much more. My friends have said throughout my life how bad of a texter I am. It’s because when I’m hanging out with people, I’m rarely the person who’s checking texts. But I do think that playing Ingrid and the thoughts that this movie provokes have made me even more aware. That’s not to say I got a flip phone. I, unfortunately, still have an Instagram and a smartphone.
Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die is the most anti-AI movie to come out in the AI era. This technology is being imposed on us, and it’s a threat to most walks of life, especially creative ones. You already had reasons to worry as an actor, but as the author of a recent poetry book called I’m Sad and Horny, have you become even more opposed to AI?
Lily [Kravetz] did all of the art in the book with me, and she’s been my best friend since we were 11. We felt so proud upon having the book released because it’s something that AI could never make. Whether people like it or not, we can always feel proud of that fact. All of the things that I’ve experienced as a human — heartbreak, joy, growth, shame, coughing fits — are things that AI could maybe try to replicate, but it would never understand the nuances and the actual lived experience. The way that Lily did the art is symbolic on such an inside level, and only she and I would know of these experiences. So it’s just something artificial intelligence would never understand.
But, yeah, I have a lot of feelings about AI. Sometimes, I fall into the trap of avoidance because they’re overwhelming feelings. Still, I’m a very hopeful person, for better or worse, and I really believe strongly in my gut that there will always be people who value the irreplaceable human experience and connection through art. AI will continue to develop and get stronger, but I have to believe that there will always be people who prioritize human expression and human … What am I trying to say?
Human ingenuity?
What does ingenuity mean?
Inventiveness, creativity …
Yeah, exactly. Therefore, as long as people value that, I will always have a space to do the thing I love. I’m holding onto that hope.
You’re a noted friend to all felines, so how do you feel about the cat imagery in the film?
Zazie [Beetz] and I both love cats so much, and we love the big cat centaur/weird, large glitter-spewing penis thing. We just love it. It might be the best character in the movie. I don’t necessarily think that it makes cats look bad. If anything, the movie makes us look bad. (Laughs.) I think Ingrid says something toward the end of the movie about this “warped, twisted, worst version of us,” and we, unfortunately, are responsible for starting all this.
Gore Verbinski’s Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die ensemble.
Courtesy of Briarcliff Entertainment
I thought I had been through some bad breakups, but for Ingrid to be told by her boyfriend Tim that he’d rather live in a virtual reality coffin than actual reality with her, just brutal.
Yeah, Tim is the only human she’s ever been able to connect with or be with, physically and emotionally, in her life. So for him to fully do a 180 and abandon her in the most vile, disturbing, insane way, it’s pretty rough.
Let’s get into the major spoiler of the movie. It’s revealed that Ingrid is actually the mother of Sam Rockwell’s “The Man from the Future.” He’s trying to safeguard this AI superintelligence right before it launches so that it doesn’t kill your character many years later. How would you describe the day where you cradled Sam Rockwell in your arms as if he’s your son?
As if? He is! (Laughs.) When he disappeared in my cradled arms, the rest of the cast was having the easiest, most fun day of their careers. They were walking around, smiling and hugging each other, while I was having this crisis, this psychotic break and this deep panic. So I definitely felt like a crazy person that day because everyone was so emotionally regulated and happy and chill, and I physically looked like an insane person. Normally, when you have a really intense, emotional, crazy scene like that, the other people around you are also in that headspace. So there’s this energy around you that you can rely on, but much like Ingrid in the scene, I felt totally alone and on the exact opposite page of everyone else.
[Major spoiler question continues.] There are a lot of clues like when she wants to watch the sunrise with Tim (Tom Taylor). Or when The Man from the Future goes off on her for not getting out of the way of the falling car. Did you and Sam feel like you didn’t have to leave any added breadcrumbs because the script already had enough clues baked into it?
Yeah, the script already had the perfect amount of clues. The first time I read it, I was just so interested to learn more about Ingrid as the movie progresses. She’s truly mysterious. She comes off like she doesn’t care, but it’s obvious that she deeply cares. She’s at a very critical emotional time in her life, and you just want to know why.
As far as her and “The Man from the Future,” I’ve named him Derek. I feel like I’m allowed to name him because I’m his mom. There’s a weird relationship between Ingrid and Derek, and you don’t know why he’s so opposed to her going on the mission at the beginning. You don’t know why he seems to care about her when he doesn’t really care about anyone else. I then had this interesting revelation when I first read the script and was realizing in real time that Ingrid is his mom and she’s pregnant with him during the mission. I had this weird realization hit me where I was like, “Of course, she is!” It was almost like I already knew it instinctively.
When we did the scene where the weird creepy AI boy is revealing it to Ingrid, I felt that too as Ingrid. So there was a deep subconscious draw or connection to this strangely dressed, rabid man that comes into Norms. It was more than just, “Fuck it. I’ll risk my life to follow this crazy person because I’m depressed and heartbroken and alone in the world.”
Did you and “Derek” (Rockwell) talk about The White Lotus since he got the last-minute offer to join season three while you were filming?
First of all, I love that you’re on board with Derek. And yes, he got that part offered to him when we were in South Africa. I remember sitting in his trailer when he asked, “Would you run this scene with me?” And I was like, “Sure!” I obviously know how far [creator] Mike [White] will go with his White Lotus characters, but I was shocked when I heard Sam’s big monologue. I was like, “What is Mike on? How could this possibly fit into anything? What is happening?” So I read it with Sam, and he was still deciding if he wanted to do it for sure. He was like, “I don’t know, man. Are people going to think I’m a creep? Is this too much?” And I was like, “Sam, I think you really have to do this.”
So you heard his monologue for the ages before Walton Goggins did.
Yes, I’m Walton’s stand-in. (Laughs.)
Haley Lu Richardson and Jennifer Coolidge on The White Lotus season two.
Fabio Lovino/HBO
I’ve loved all of your recent answers to questions about whether you’d be willing to come back for more White Lotus. Your response is basically, “How is this even a question?”
Yeah, it’s just one of those shows that really hits people. It’s so fun, and Mike is just really smart. So, yeah, returning would just be a no-brainer.
As season three was airing, did you hear the fan theory about Portia potentially being Carrie Coon’s character’s daughter?
Yeah, my dad sent me some article about that, and it was literally all rooted in the fact that we had the same haircut. It was literally that simple. I was like, “Yeah, that’s how genetics work. If you have the same haircut, that’s how [blood relation] works.” (Laughs.)
Haley Lu Richardson and Emilia Clarke in Ponies.
Katalin Vermes/Peacock
I regret to inform you that I’m only halfway through Ponies, but as soon as I heard you were being teamed up with Emilia Clarke, I just knew the two of you would be a perfect duo. I particularly love the moment where you mock her character for asking if she can ask a question. That’s been a pet peeve of mine for decades.
Well, I regret to inform you that I am, in real life, one of those people that says, “Can I ask you something?”
Wow.
I’m really sorry. That’s why it was extra hilarious that I said that line because I truly have been that person. I’m very sorry to everyone I’ve ever done that to and to everyone I will do that to moving forward. It’s redundant and annoying.
A friend of mine used to do it every time we hung out, and despite repeatedly telling him how unnecessary it was, he kept doing it for over a decade.
And even if you said no, he’d still ask it anyway.
Exactly!
It’s really stupid.
I have one last question regarding your book. Was the title I’m Sad and Horny inspired by that famous Phoebe Bridgers’ tweet where she said, “I’m sad and horny,” after watching the show Normal People during the pandemic?
Oh my God, Phoebe Bridgers said, “I’m sad and horny”?
Yes, and then Paul Mescal responded, which led to a whole thing between them.
Oh my God, I did not know about that. I’m feeling mixed emotions right now because I’m such a Phoebe fan. I just love her music so much. Phoebe’s music makes me sad and horny, and it has really helped me accept my sadness inside, which also makes my horniness deeper in a weird way. (Laughs.) Honestly, Phoebe is a crucial part of the emotional, physical, psychological development in my life. So it’s actually crazy to hear that she tweeted that. Maybe I’m just really in tune with her, or maybe she’s inspired me so much that I think like her now. I don’t know.
I hope this example of two great minds thinking alike leads to a team-up someday.
I would love to collaborate with Phoebe one day. I was very much inspired by Phoebe for Ingrid — her energy, her mannerisms, her stance, her hair. We had a picture of Phoebe up in the hair and makeup trailer as one of our inspirations.
Who would’ve thought that my last question about a 6-year-old Phoebe Bridgers tweet would tie your recent work together so well?
It’s your human ingenuity, as I google ingenuity. Thank you for asking great questions and for putting up with my choking.
*** Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die is now playing in movie theaters.
Robert Cosby Jr., the son of The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City star Mary Cosby, has died. He was 23.
The Salt Lake City police department confirmed his death with The Hollywood Reporter. On Monday, police responded to an overdose call at about 6:14 p.m., noting that it then became a death investigation.
“Our beloved son Robert Jr. has been called home to the Lord. Though our hearts ache, we take comfort in God’s promise and in knowing he is finally at peace,” Mary and her husband, Robert Cosby Sr., shared in a statement with THR. “We are grateful for your prayers and trust in the Lord to carry us through this time of sorrow.”
Bravo shared an additional statement: “We are heartbroken to learn of the passing of Mary’s beloved son. Robert Jr. Mary is a cherished member of our family, and our thoughts, love and deepest condolences are with her and her loved ones during this incredibly difficult time.”
Robert made appearances on the Salt Lake City-based Real Housewives series alongside his mother, who joined the show in season one. During season five, he spoke about his substance-abuse problems in a conversation with Mary, explaining that he began taking drugs, including Xanax, acid, Molly and cocaine, at 16.
“I wanted to die at the time,” Robert confessed during his conversation with Mary, to which she responded, “You know how that would kill me?”
It was a standout moment from the wider Real Housewives franchise.
During the season six reunion of RHOSLC, which aired Jan. 20, Mary revealed that Robert was in jail, relating to eight charges, including a violation of a protective order involving his wife, Alexiana Smokoff. Earlier in the season, she had opened up about Robert’s relapse after he attended rehab in 2024.
In December of that year, Mary confirmed during a Watch What Happens Live appearance that her son had been in rehab. “He did an excellent job. He came out a new person,” she said.
In early February, Robert celebrated his release from jail, as did Mary, with posts on Instagram. “Thank you all for your prayers,” the Housewife wrote on a photo of her son. “Love you.”
Following Robert’s candidness about his addiction on RHOSLC, Mary reacted to the outpouring of support she and her son received from viewers, telling The Hollywood Reporter that “my son and I didn’t even plan [to talk about that on camera].”
“The cameras started rolling, and he and I just started talking. He was shocking me and I was shocking him, and we were just being ourselves as if cameras wasn’t there,” she said in September. “To be able to get that reaction and feedback from people is mind-blowing. It’s humbling. It feels good. I’m glad I did it. I wouldn’t change anything.”
Bravo boss Andy Cohen shared his condolences on Threads on Wednesday, writing: “Devastatingly sad news out of SLC. This is every parent’s worst nightmare. My heart is broken for Mary, and I am sending all my love to her and Robert Sr.”
If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, The Hollywood Reporter may receive an affiliate commission.
Whether it’s Palm Springs’ palm tree-lined El Paseo shopping district or the cobblestone lanes of the Cotswolds, Boden’s spring womenswear collection fits seamlessly into any getaway. The British label is known for its effortless, versatile pieces that make a timeless statement: think fit-and-flare maxi dresses in vacation-ready prints that go from brunch to beach, or V-neck swimsuits that pair effortlessly with linen shorts by day or maxi skirts by night.
With the approach of spring and summer, stylish Hollywood insiders are plotting their next sunny weather adventures around film festivals and other occasions. And for those who prefer to make every inch of carry-on space count, a worry-free wardrobe that works for every possibility leaves room in your travel schedule to soak up every special second.
Here, see how Boden defines every vacation moment with smart, chic travel staples, styled for six star-loved destinations.
Beachside Brunch in Saint-Tropez
From the late Brigitte Bardot’s And God Created Woman to Emily in Paris, the French Riviera town (a favorite pre- or post-festival stop for Cannes) has starred in no shortage of stylish scenes on the big and small screens. Boden’s print-happy Clean Sweetheart Swimsuit – paired with your favorite breezy coverup, the chic pink suede Triple Strap Sandal and Hammered Double Earrings – suits the mood for beachfront brunch at the famed Café Senequier before grabbing your Raffa Moon Clutch and stepping on to a chartered yacht to sip mimosas and soak up the sun along the Côte d’Azur. And when there’s talk of an impromptu swim, Boden’s one-piece will have you ready to take the plunge in style.
Clean Sweetheart Swimsuit
Triple Strap Footbed Sandal
Sunrise and Flat Whites in Sydney
Start the day at sunrise with Boden’s breezy blue linen Tie Neck Kaftan – ideal for covering up under Australia’s notoriously strong sun – and strappy gold Knot Sandals, perfect for grabbing a flat white before strolling the waterfront and people-watching at the Circular Quay. The embroidered midi dress and Mini Straw Tote suit Sydney’s beach-chic vibe – and you’ll look equally chic and comfortable while wandering into the Art Gallery of New South Wales or browsing the historic Rocks Market for one-of-a-kind finds.
Gallery Tour in Florence
Though Italy is a tempting place to step into tailored territory, an adventure in Florence calls for Boden’s linen Pia Cotton Yoke Dress. When finished with the exquisite gold Circle Necklace and Hammered Double Earrings, the classic striped ensemble tells a bold, luxurious style story that blends seamlessly with the artistic city. Throw on the embellished black suede sandals to gaze upon Renaissance masterpieces at the Uffizi, then hop over to the Accademia Gallery (home of Michelangelo’s “David”) – along the way, you might satisfy your sweet tooth with gelato at Mercato Centrale or discover the most delicious schiacciata of your trip.
Statement Circle Necklace
Shoreside Relaxation in East Hampton
For the white sand beaches of East Hampton, Boden’s crisp Florence Linen Maxi Dress is ready to go where the day takes you. Leave your strappy gold sandals and Raffa Moon Clutch on your beach blanket for an ankle-deep dip into the Atlantic (or wear the Porto V-Neck Swimsuit beneath the dress so you’re ready for a dive), then head back for seaside charcuterie, gourmet cheese and rose. Keep the low-key itinerary going with shopping on Main Street and lobster rolls at the casual-cool Bostwick’s Chowder House (frequented by Neil Patrick Harris and Bobby Flay) or throw on Boden’s gold jewelry for high-end, Mediterranean fare at Nick & Toni’s (where you might spot the likes of J Lo, Tom Hanks or Steven Spielberg).
Florence Linen Maxi Dress
Garden Lunch in the Cotswolds
Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi are among the stars who recently flocked to the English countryside, which makes for a dreamy weekend getaway. Boden’s gorgeous green Short Kaftan Dress – in a summer-ready linen and floral-embroidered silhouette – and the woven Interlocked Flat Sandal are fitting picks for lunch at the Burford Garden Centre, whose rustic, seasonal menu and artisanal home goods attract the likes of David and Victoria Beckham, Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce and other stars. From there, grab your Mini Straw Tote and wander Hidcote Manor’s stunning Arts & Crafts gardens – lest you forget, your understated-luxe ensemble makes for a floral-filled photo moment.
Clean Sweetheart Swimsuit
Sunset Stroll in Palm Springs
Summer nights in Palm Springs always require pavement-to-pool dressing – especially when poolside cocktails come calling. The former stomping grounds of Frank Sinatra, Marilyn Monroe and Dean Martin (and now a vacation home spot to Leonardo DiCaprio, Clint Eastwood and others) is a picturesque backdrop for Boden’s zig-zag printed Mykonos Deep V Swimsuit and matching Belgravia Linen Shorts as you step out for a sunset stroll along shopping and art paradises such as Palm Canyon Drive or El Paseo. After dinner, don’t be surprised if you end up at midcentury resorts or cool poolside bars like L’Horizon, the Parker Palm Springs or Palm Canyon Swim & Social for mai tais and agave-infused spritzes.
LAFC sent a loud message in their 3-0 dismantling of Inter Miami, and it wasn’t just about the scoreline. Los Angeles FC looked sharp, organized, and ruthless, while Inter Miami CF looked frustrated and overwhelmed. We break down what went wrong for Miami, what this result means long-term, and whether Lionel Messi’s heated postgame interaction with referees is a sign of deeper cracks. Plus, we recap the rest of MLS opening weekend and highlight the teams that set the tone early.
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Across the pond, the Premier League title race is heating up once again. Manchester City and Arsenal continue to push each other to the limit at the top of the table. Can City pull off another late surge, or is this finally Arsenal’s year? We examine the remaining fixtures, squad depth, and pressure points that could decide the title.
Off the pitch, concerns are growing around the 2026 tournament. With New Jersey canceling its World Cup fan zone and Gillette Stadium reportedly resisting FIFA licensing without additional funding, we ask whether the 2026 World Cup is starting to show serious organizational strain. Is this just early logistical turbulence—or a warning sign for what’s ahead?
Timestamps:
(7:00) – LAFC thrash Messi and Inter Miami
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(23:00) – MLS opening weekend recap
(32:00) – Arsenal and Man City continue to battle in PL title race
(47:45) – World Cup in danger of falling apart already?
Kevin O’Connor sits down with former Denver Nuggets GM Calvin Booth for an unfiltered look inside team building, executive strategy and the realities of finding success in the NBA. How did he manage the team during their championship run?
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Booth also shares candid reflections on his relationship with former head coach Michael Malone, insights on sustaining a championship window and his philosophy behind drafting players and developing talent.
(1:11) Keys to building a championship team
(10:06) Bruce Brown’s development
(11:30) Jokic’s growth in Denver
(16:30) Nuggets post-championship
(31:33) Friction between Booth & Malone
(40:43) What would Booth do differently looking back?
(49:42) Is Denver on the path to a dynasty?
(52:18) College basketball landscape & impact on Draft
(1:03:53) Overrated traits & underrated players
Nikola Jokic #15 of the Denver Nuggets looks on against the Golden State Warriors in the second half of an NBA basketball game at Chase Center on February 22, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)
With the Winter Olympics in the rearview, it’s time for baseball’s international competition to move into the spotlight. That’s right: We’re one week away from the start of the 2026 World Baseball Classic, the sixth edition of the tournament.
Tournament history: This is Brazil’s second WBC. The team went 0-3 in 2013 but kept things respectably close against Japan and Cuba.
First game: March 6 vs. USA, 8 p.m. ET (7 p.m. local)
Key players: Just three arms on Brazil’s roster — Eric Pardinho, Daniel Missaki and Gabriel Barbosa — pitched in an affiliated baseball game last season. Missaki, who appeared in the 2013 WBC as a 16-year-old, is probably the most qualified character to start against Team USA. He threw 74 innings of 4.38 ERA ball in Triple-A last season. Enzo Sawayama punched out six in a crucial qualifying game against Germany last March. He has never pitched in affiliated ball but suits up in Japan for Yamaha’s company team, which won the country’s Amateur Baseball Championship last year. Presumably, he will start one of Brazil’s games.
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Guy you don’t know yet but should: Joseph Contreras is the son of longtime MLB starter José Contreras but could end up being a lot more than that. Still just 17 years old, the younger Contreras is committed to pitch at powerhouse Vanderbilt next year, but he might get enough money in the upcoming draft to ditch college altogether. While understandably raw, Contreras’ heater is comfortably in the mid-90s.
Biggest strength: The inherent randomness of baseball. Listen, the best hitters on the planet return to the bench seven out of 10 times. A 120 mph lineout counts the same as an infield fly. Bloops, dunks, infield hits and other batted-ball tomfoolery tend to ensure a relative balancing of the scales. Perhaps Brazil can coax the baseball gods to sleep for long enough to conjure a miracle.
Biggest weakness: The roster. Perhaps the following sentiment is unnecessarily cruel or rude, but Brazil’s opening game against Team USA might showcase the single largest talent discrepancy to ever grace a ballfield. Nobody on the Brazilian squad has ever appeared in an MLB game. The Americans might have 10 Hall of Famers. We’ve never seen such a fascinating baseball experiment.
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Tournament outlook: For Brazil, simply qualifying for the WBC is an incredible accomplishment. These will be the biggest games of every player’s life. That is legitimately cool. With that in mind, avoiding a football score against the United States would be an enormous moral victory. A showdown with Great Britain presents Brazil’s best opportunity for an improbable win, but just looking like a normal, competent, not embarrassing baseball club would be enough. Vai, Brasil, and good luck.
Tournament history: After debuting in 2023, Great Britain is back for its second WBC. The fightin’ Union Jacks were a nice surprise last time, with a win against Colombia and close, hard-fought losses against the USA and Mexico.
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First game: March 6 vs. Mexico, 1 p.m. ET (12 p.m. local)
Key players: Jazz Chisholm Jr., born and raised in the Bahamas like much of this roster, appeared for Great Britain numerous times during his amateur career, but this will be his first WBC appearance. The swaggering second baseman was named a co-captain of Team GB alongside Nationals catcher Harry Ford, who went deep twice as a 20-year-old in the 2023 tournament. That relatively proven tandem will lead the offense, but it’ll be up to Rays pitching prospect Gary Gill Hill to set the tone on the bump. As a 20-year-old, “GGH” threw 136 ⅔ strong innings in High-A last year. Sashimi raw he might be, but Gill Hill’s stuff is a tier above that of anybody else on this staff.
Guy you don’t know yet but should: Heading into 2020, Kristian Robinson was a consensus top-50 prospect in the sport, an athletic unicorn built like an NFL tight end with elite power potential. But a mental health episode during the pandemic, during which Robinson punched a police officer after being found wandering on the side of a Phoenix-area highway, derailed his march to potential stardom. After missing all of 2020, ‘21 and ‘22, Robinson has gradually crawled his way up the minor-league ladder. He’ll probably never become the player he could have been, but that he has gotten this far is a testament to his perseverance.
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Biggest strength: Team speed. Chisholm swiped 31 bags for the Yankees last year. Robinson stole 34 in the minors. BJ Murray took 20. Harry Ford stole 34 two years ago. Indie ballers Justin Wylie and Nick Ward stole 37 and 20. Nate Eaton had only nine steals in limited big-league time, but he graded out in the 98th percentile of sprint speed. The point is this group can fly. They’ll need to sneak their way on base, but if they do, watch out.
Biggest weakness: Pitching. Only two British arms are currently on 40-man MLB rosters: Miami’s Michael Peterson and San Francisco’s Tristan Beck, both of whom are relievers. This rotation looks paper thin, with 38-year-old former big leaguer Vance Worley set to get a start despite not having pitched in MLB since 2017. Remember, Team USA put up 18 on these guys in 2023.
Tournament outlook: In a weaker group, Great Britain would be a fun dark horse, thanks to all that Bahamian position-player talent. Unfortunately, it’s tough to see this squad upping either the USA or Mexico, which it would need to do to escape this pool. But maybe Chisholm catches fire, and this fleet-footed lineup overcomes the total dearth of impact pitching.
Aaron Judge leads a Team USA squad that is the heavy favorite to win the 2026 WBC. But which two teams will advance from Pool B?
(Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)
Tournament history: Italy, participants in all six editions of the WBC, made it beyond pool play for the first time in 2023.
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First game: March 7 vs. Brazil, 1 p.m. ET (12 p.m. local)
Key player: Aaron Nola is easily the most accomplished MLB pitcher to ever take the mound for Italy in the World Baseball Classic. It’ll be interesting to see if he starts against Team USA or if the Italians opt to use him against Mexico, considering the Mexicans are Italy’s likeliest competitor for a trip to the knockout stage.
Guy you don’t know yet but should: Andrew Fischer was taken by the Brewers with the 20th overall pick last summer out of the University of Tennessee. Fischer was born in Brick, New Jersey, a fitting origin story considering this guy is built like a wall. At the plate, he’s as demonstrative as they come, shuffling, head-shaking and gesturing like an Italian-American Juan Soto. And when he does swing, Fischer deploys a wild, uppercut hack that is as fun as it is violent.
Biggest strength: Raw juice. Between Fischer, Vinnie Pasquantino, Jac Caglianone, Dominic Canzone and Jakob Marsee, the Italians will almost always be a swing away from putting runs on the board. This is one of a surprisingly small number of WBC lineups expected to start nine big leaguers. That’s not nothing.
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Biggest weakness: Luck of the draw. The Italians find themselves in the proverbial group of death, alongside Team USA and Mexico. Besides that, this is a very balanced roster with a much-upgraded bullpen compared to the 2023 vintage.
Tournament outlook: In 2023, the Italians were sent to Taiwan for pool play. That helped them emerge from a very even group, but it also made it much harder to convince Italian-American big leaguers to fly across the world to participate. That task was simpler this go-around, as evidenced by the plethora of MLBers on this roster. As such, expectations are high for this group. Besting Mexico for the second ticket to the quarterfinals won’t be easy, but Italy raised the bar last time. This team has the talent to reach the semifinals.
Tournament history: Mexico’s third-place finish in 2023 was its best-ever WBC result. This team has appeared in every tournament.
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First game: March 6 vs. Great Britain, 1 p.m. ET (12 p.m. local)
Key players: Randy Arozarena dominated the 2023 WBC with both bat and charisma. The Cuban-born Mexican citizen finished that tourney 9-for-20 with six doubles and a homer to go alongside a string of stellar defensive plays. Mexico needs him to get hot again. And Toronto catcher Alejandro Kirk didn’t play in 2023, which makes his inclusion this time a potential difference-maker.
Guy you don’t know yet but should: Alexander Armenta is the only pitcher on this roster without any professional stateside experience, but the 21-year-old is no schlub. The 5-foot-9 southpaw signed with the NPB Softbank Hawks as an 18-year-old back in 2022 and has slowly matriculated up the Japanese minor-league system. He sits 93 mph with real deception and a pair of breakers.
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Biggest strengths: Defense and relief pitching. Defensively, the Mexicans are loaded up the middle of the diamond, with Kirk behind the dish, Joey Ortiz at short and Alek Thomas in center. And this bullpen unleashes more cheese than a cotija farm. Andres Muñoz, Viktor Vodnik and Alex Carillo all sit 98. Robert Garcia and Brennan Bernardino are capable late-inning lefties.
Biggest weakness: Starting pitching. Taijuan Walker, José Urquidy, Javier Assad and Taj Bradley are all Big Leaguers™, sure. But that quartet is dangerously lacking in the raw sauce necessary to quiet cacophonous lineups like the ones USA and Italy have.
Tournament outlook: It’ll be difficult to come back late against Mexico, which features one of the best bullpens in the entire tournament. But this starting staff is weak enough that opposing teams might be able to jump to early leads. While Mexico upset Team USA in 2023 and very well could do so again, its whole tournament likely comes down to the game against Italy on March 11. The winner of that one almost certainly makes it out of the group stage. For a Mexican team coming off a rousing semifinal appearance, that would be the bare minimum.
Tournament history: Team USA has generally underwhelmed on the national stage when defending the so-called “American Pastime.” Despite having access to around 70% of active MLB players in any given year, the Stars and Stripes have won this tournament just once, in 2017, and appeared in the final only one additional time, in 2023.
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First game: March 6 vs. Brazil, 8 p.m. ET (7 p.m. local)
Key players: For all the hoopla about how much better USA’s starting rotation is compared to 2023, the real reason Japan won it all last time is because most of the American position players didn’t hit. Team USA managed just three extra-base hits in the final, two of which were solo homers. Mike Trout went 1-for-4. Mookie Betts grounded into a crucial double play in the ninth. It was only one game, but you know, it was only one game. This year, an entire new crop of stars takes center stage. Instead of Trout, Betts and Arenado, it’s Aaron Judge, Bobby Witt Jr., Cal Raleigh and Bryce Harper. Kyle Schwarber and Will Smith are the only regulars back from three years ago. To return to the mountaintop, the American squad needs its special players to do special things.
Guy you don’t know yet but should: Garrett Cleavinger is probably the most anonymous guy on this star-studded roster, but let’s focus on Mets phenom Nolan McLean. The former Oklahoma State Cowboy made just eight starts down the stretch for a depressing, doomed 2025 Mets club, but they were eight sensationally dominant starts. The runaway favorite to win NL Rookie of the Year in 2026, McLean certainly has the right temperament to shine on the international stage.
Biggest strength: Star power, duh. Thirteen of the 22 non-relievers on Team USA’s roster were All-Stars last season. And that doesn’t include dudes such as Gunnar Henderson, Bryce Harper, Roman Anthony, Mason Miller and Nolan McLean.
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Biggest weakness: Probably the bullpen. This is admittedly a strange way to do this, but only three of the top 11 MLB relievers by fWAR last year were American. That’s Garrett Whitlock, David Bednar and Mason Miller, all of whom are on this roster. This is still probably the best and deepest group of relievers in the tournament, but I was asked for a weakness. What do you want me to do?
Tournament outlook: On paper, this is the most talented team in WBC history. But the only things won on paper are crosswords and hangman. Much has been made of the news that two-time defending Cy Young Tarik Skubal will start only one WBC game, likely against Great Britain. But even if Skubal were to denounce his citizenship and move to Belarus in the next few weeks, Team USA would still have the best rotation in the tournament. Still, this is baseball, the most volatile of all sports. The Americans could easily lose once again, but the odds are very much in their favor.