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  • Indiana’s win over Ohio State is the most-watched Big Ten title game ever

    The No. 1 vs. No. 2 matchup of undefeated teams in the Big Ten championship game drew a massive audience for Fox. The network said Tuesday afternoon that Indiana’s 13-10 win over Ohio State had an average audience of 18.3 million viewers and was the most-watched Big Ten championship game ever.

    The Hoosiers’ win netted them the No. 1 seed in the College Football Playoff on Sunday. Ohio State (12-1) swapped spots with Indiana (13-0) and got the No. 2 seed. The game was also a tiebreaker of sorts for the Heisman Trophy.

    Indiana QB Fernando Mendoza and Ohio State QB Julian Sayin entered the game as co-favorites for the award. While Sayin was named as a finalist on Monday along with Mendoza, Notre Dame RB Jeremiyah Love and Vanderbilt QB Diego Pavia, Mendoza is considered the clear favorite entering Saturday night’s ceremony.

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    It’s the first Big Ten title for Indiana since the Hoosiers won the conference in 1967 and went to the Rose Bowl. Indiana is headed to the Rose Bowl again this season and will meet the winner of No. 8 Oklahoma vs. No. 9 Alabama on Jan. 1.

    A year ago, the Big Ten title game netted 10.5 million viewers on CBS as Oregon beat Penn State to cap an undefeated season. The Ducks were the top seed in the College Football Playoff a year ago.

    ESPN said later Tuesday that Georgia’s win in the SEC championship game had nearly 17 million viewers. That game could have matched or topped the Big Ten’s numbers if it was competitive. Georgia beat Alabama 28-7 and Alabama didn’t drop a spot in the playoff rankings the next day as Notre Dame was left out of the playoff in favor of Miami.

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    The ratings for this year’s Big Ten title game almost put it on par with Ohio State’s win over Michigan a week earlier. The Buckeyes’ victory over the Wolverines drew 18.4 million viewers and was the most-watched regular season game of 2025. Before that game, Ohio State’s Week 1 victory over Texas was the most-watched game of the season.

  • Former Chargers first-round pick admits to playing drunk for half of 2011 season

    Former NFL cornerback Quentin Jammer recently revealed that in 2011, he played while drunk in at least eight of the 15 games he suited up for that season.

    Jammer tweeted this shocking revelation out to the masses on X on Monday night (there’s some salty language in the message).

    During the 2011 season, Jammer was in the process of going through a divorce. Those personal issues led to the drinking, Jammer said. He allowed six touchdowns that year, which was two more than his average the previous five seasons.

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    “It’s hard playing football when so much is on your mind,” Jammer admitted.

    The Chargers finished that season 8-8, missing the playoffs for the second straight year under head coach Norv Turner. Jammer started 15 games in 2011 and recorded 53 total tackles, 8 passes defended and 1 fumble recovery.

    Jammer was the No. 5 overall pick in the 2002 NFL Draft for the Chargers and went on to play 12 years in the league, 11 with the Chargers. Although he was never named to a Pro Bowl or All-Pro team, he was a solid defender who lasted over a decade in the NFL. That 2011 campaign was one of only three seasons where he did not snag at least one interception. Jammer was also durable as he played in at least 15 games in 10 of his 12 pro seasons. And Jammer never appeared in fewer than 11 games, which was his final year in 2013 while playing for the Denver Broncos.

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    Jammer ended his NFL career following the 2013 season. He finished with 735 career tackles, 140 passes defended, 21 interceptions (including a pick 6), 11 tackles for loss and 7 fumble recoveries.

  • MLB Draft lottery: White Sox win No. 1 overall pick in 2026

    The Chicago White Sox struggled in 2025, but help is on the way. After going 60-102 last year, Chicago won the MLB Draft lottery on Tuesday, earning the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 MLB Draft.

    The White Sox entered the event with a 27.73% chance to earn the top pick in next year’s draft, the best odds of any team. Now 2026 will be the first time the White Sox pick first overall since the team drafted Hall of Famer Harold Baines in 1977.

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    Baines happened to be Chicago’s representative for this year’s lottery. It might also be worth noting that this was the first lottery since a White Sox fan became pope.

    Whom will Chicago choose with the pick? UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky is currently the consensus top talent in 2026, but you really never know how the 2026 season will go or what deals might be cut in the MLB Draft.

    After the White Sox, the Minnesota Twins (22.18%), Pittsburgh Pirates (16.81%), Baltimore Orioles (9.24%) and Athletics (6.55%) were the only other teams with better than 5% odds to win the draft lottery.

    Those odds are, generally, determined based on a team’s record the previous season. The White Sox had a bad record in 2025 but not the worst record in baseball. That “honor” went to the Colorado Rockies, who finished 43-119. But the Rockies were not eligible for a lottery pick this season, as a rule prevents a team from picking in the lottery for more than two consecutive years.

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    The Rockies picked fourth in the 2025 draft and third in 2024, rendering them ineligible to be a lottery team in 2026. Because of that, the earliest the Rockies could pick in the 2026 MLB Draft was 10th.

    The Washington Nationals and Los Angeles Angels were also ineligible for the lottery because, as teams that pay revenue-sharing dollars rather than receive, they cannot have a lottery pick in consecutive years. The Nationals picked first in 2025, selecting high school shortstop Eli Willits, while the Angels picked second, taking UC Santa Barbara pitcher Tyler Bremner. Like the Rockies, the earliest those two teams could pick was 10th.

    2026 MLB Draft order

    1. Chicago White Sox
    2. Tampa Bay Rays
    3. Minnesota Twins
    4. San Francisco Giants
    5. Pittsburgh Pirates
    6. Kansas City Royals
    7. Baltimore Orioles
    8. Athletics
    9. Atlanta Braves
    10. Colorado Rockies
    11. Washington Nationals
    12. Los Angeles Angels
    13. St. Louis Cardinals
    14. Miami Marlins
    15. Arizona Diamondbacks
    16. Texas Rangers
    17. Houston Astros
    18. Cincinnati Reds
    19. Cleveland Guardians
    20. Boston Red Sox
    21. San Diego Padres
    22. Detroit Tigers
    23. Chicago Cubs
    24. Seattle Mariners
    25. Milwaukee Brewers
    26. Atlanta Braves
    27. New York Mets

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    The Los Angeles Dodgers, Toronto Blue Jays, Philadelphia Phillies and New York Yankees all moved out of the first round after exceeding the second competitive-balance-tax threshold, which pushes their first pick back 10 spots.

    The Braves earned a second first-round pick due to catcher Drake Baldwin winning Rookie of the Year in 2025.

  • Clippers’ Tyronn Lue refutes report that he wasn’t on speaking terms with Chris Paul for several weeks

    Los Angeles Clippers head coach Tyronn Lue refuted reports that he and 12-time All-Star point guard Chris Paul weren’t on speaking terms for several weeks leading up to Paul’s dismissal from the team on Dec. 3, and that Lue refused to meet with Paul.

    “We were talking,” Lue said Tuesday.

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    “I mean, he played. How he going to play if I’m not talking to him? There was a stretch when we said he wasn’t going to play, he was going to be out of the rotation. It was tough for him because he’s a competitor and what the game means to him and what he brings every single day. But after that, it wasn’t really much.”

    Paul is 40 years old and in his 21st season in the NBA. The 2025-26 campaign is expected to be his final go-around in the league. He didn’t play because of a coach’s decision five times last month but was playing as recently as Dec. 1. In 16 games with the Clippers, he was averaging a career-low 2.9 points and 3.3 assists in 14.3 minutes per game.

    The Clippers, who are now 6-18, sent him home while they were in Atlanta during a road trip at the beginning of December. Paul broke the news on Instagram. Clippers president of basketball operations Lawrence Frank then confirmed in a statement that Paul is no longer with the team, noting that Paul isn’t to blame for the team’s “underperformance” and that he is “a legendary Clipper.”

    Basketball: NBA Playoffs: Los Angeles Clippers (L-R) Matt Barnes, assistant coach Tyronn Lue, Blake Griffin, and Chris Paul during game vs Golden State Warriors at Staples Center. Game 7.
Los Angeles, CA 5/3/2014
CREDIT: John W. McDonough (Photo by John W. McDonough /Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)
(Set Number: X158175 TK1 )

    Tyronn Lue also coached Chris Paul earlier in his career while as an assistant for the “Lob City” Clippers from 2013-14. (Photo by John W. McDonough /Sports Illustrated via Getty Images)

    (John W. McDonough via Getty Images)

    Hours later last Wednesday, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported that Paul’s leadership style, specifically a willingness to hold management, coaches and players accountable, “clashed” with the Clippers, and that Paul had not spoken to Lue “for several weeks.”

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    When Frank met with reporters later that day, he said he had a three-hour meeting with Paul before his dismissal while also saying Paul “has a very good leadership style” but that some roster moves just don’t work, per Clippers reporter Justin Russo.

    “This one just didn’t work at this time,” Frank said this past Wednesday, according to Russo.

    Lue said Tuesday that he wasn’t part of the final conversation as Paul was on his way out.

    “I wasn’t there,” he said.

    A reporter asked why Paul’s situation was irreconcilable, referencing other times the Clippers have sent players home before bringing them back.

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    “You got to ask Lawrence,” Lue said.

    Lue said he had no problem with Paul, whom he also coached earlier in his career while as an assistant for the “Lob City” Clippers from 2013-14, pointing out “that’s my guy” while referring to him as a friend and referencing a 40-minute phone conversation he had with Paul.

    “You don’t want to see that happen to anybody no matter what the circumstances are.”

    Clippers players, notably stars Kawhi Leonard and James Harden, were shocked by Paul’s dismissal. Lue acknowledged Tuesday that his team isn’t happy about it.

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    “It’s their teammate. It’s a guy they go to war with every single day, and he was part of us,” Lue said. “So it’s tough. The organization just made the decision to do it, but we got to move on. We got to try to win some games.”

    Lue said he considers Paul a Hall of Famer and one of the top five or six point guards to ever play the game. He’s confident the Wake Forest product’s legacy will still endure.

    Paul has played for seven franchises and, and even though an NBA championship has escaped his résumé, he’s collected a laundry list of accomplishments, including 11 All-NBA selections and nine NBA All-Defensive Team nods. Additionally, Paul has led the league in assists five times and steals six times.

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    He started his career with the New Orleans Hornets. They selected him No. 4 overall in the 2005 draft. He won NBA Rookie of the Year in 2006, jumpstarting his six-season run with the Hornets that went through the 2010-11 season.

    Since, he’s suited up for the Los Angeles Clippers (2011-17), Houston Rockets (2017-19), Oklahoma City Thunder (2019-20), Phoenix Suns (2020-23), Golden State Warriors (2023-24), San Antonio Spurs (2024-25) and now the Clippers again.

    In an interview with People magazine released Tuesday, Paul said that he’s “at peace with everything.”

    “I’m home. My daughter had tryouts yesterday. My nephew had a basketball game. My son has a game coming up on the 12th,” Paul said, via People.

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    He also noted: “More than anything, I’m excited about being around and getting a chance to play a small role in whatever anything looks like next.”

  • Big 12 commissioner calls out Notre Dame AD Pete Bevacqua’s ‘egregious’ behavior after missing College Football Playoff

    Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark thinks that Pete Bevacqua took things too far in the wake of Notre Dame missing the College Football Playoff.

    Yormark, speaking on a panel in Las Vegas on Tuesday, called out Bevacqua for the way that the Notre Dame athletic director spoke out about the ACC and commissioner Jim Phillips this week.

    “I don’t like how Notre Dame’s reacted to it,” Yormark said, via the Sports Business Journal. “I think Pete, his behavior has been egregious … I think he is totally out of bounds in his approach, and if he was in the room, I’d tell him the same thing.

    Notre Dame, despite an impressive 10-2 season, was surprisingly left out of the College Football Playoff on Sunday. The school quickly opted not to play in a bowl game, either. Almost immediately, Bevacqua told Yahoo Sports’ Ross Dellenger that he was hit with “overwhelming shock and sadness” by the decision, and he later called the CFP’s weekly ranking shows a “farce.” The playoff, he said, “was stolen from our student-athletes.”

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    Instead, Miami received the final at-large spot over Notre Dame in the field despite Notre Dame being repeatedly ranked higher in the weekly CFP polls throughout the season. The Hurricanes, also 10-2, beat the Fighting Irish in the first week of the regular season.

    While it’s easy to understand why Bevacqua would stand up for his school after feeling like they were snubbed from a shot at a championship, he quickly took things further and started attacking the ACC — which Notre Dame is a partial member of. While the Fighting Irish compete as an independent in football, they participate in the ACC in other sports, and play multiple ACC opponents every football season.

    Bevacqua claimed the ACC did “permanent damage” to its relationship with Notre Dame while pushing for Miami to make it into the College Football Playoff instead.

    “We didn’t appreciate the fact that we were singled out repeatedly and compared to Miami, not by Miami, Miami has every right to do that,” he said. “But it raised a lot of eyebrows here that the conference was taking shots at us.”

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    Phillips issued a statement in response to Bevacqua’s comments later on Monday afternoon.

    “The University of Notre Dame is an incredibly valued member of the ACC, and there is tremendous respect and appreciation for the entire institution,” Phillips’ statement reads. “With that said, when it comes to football, we have a responsibility to support and advocate for all 17 of our football-playing member institutions, and I stand behind our conference efforts to do just that leading up to the College Football Playoff Committee selections on Sunday.

    “At no time was it suggested by the ACC that Notre Dame was not a worthy candidate for inclusion in the field. We are thrilled for the University of Miami while also understanding and appreciating the significant disappointment of the Notre Dame players, coaches and program.”

    There are plenty who are on Notre Dame’s side here, and Bevacqua is continuing to speak out. He called Notre Dame’s finish to the season after losing back-to-back games to open the year “one of the most dominant 10-game runs in the history of college football” on Tuesday.

    Clearly, though, others in the sport aren’t too happy with him. It’s unclear what the university’s relationship with the ACC will look like moving forward. But as the football team is still independent, Bevacqua doesn’t seem too worried about what Yormark or others like him may think.

  • Thunder vs. Suns, Lakers vs. Spurs NBA Cup Preview, Raptors Temperature Check + Paolo Banchero’s Return

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    Ahead of this week’s NBA Cup slate, Nekias Duncan and Steve Jones offer temperature checks in the West, ask key questions of the East, and bounce around with observations — and ice-in-cereal thoughts.

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

    If you’d like to join our Dunker Spot Playoff watch parties — they’re free, and easy to sign up for — you can do so here: https://www.playback.tv/thedunkerspot

    (1:29) — Suns-Thunder

    (16:24) — Lakers-Spurs

    (29:49) — Orlando Magic

    (45:02) — Toronto Raptors

    (50:51) — Dallas Mavericks

    (58:37) — Golden State Warriors

    (01:00:57) — Player Shoutouts

    (01:10:19) — Free Throws

    Can the Toronto Raptors get back on track? (Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images)

    Can the Toronto Raptors get back on track? (Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images)

    (Trevor Ruszkowski-Imagn Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

  • Victor Wembanyama won’t make his return in NBA Cup quarterfinals game vs. Lakers

    Victor Wembanyama is nearing his return from the calf strain that has sidelined him since mid-November.

    But he won’t make that return for the NBA Cup quarterfinals. Previously listed as questionable, Wembanyama was ruled out by the Spurs on Tuesday night for Wednesday’s NBA Cup game against the Los Angeles Lakers.

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    Wembanyama has been sidelined due to his injury since Nov. 14. Wednesday’s game will mark the 12th straight that he has missed while injured.

    The Spurs, however, have thrived in Wembanyama’s absence, going 8-3 in the games he has missed. They’re off to a 16-7 start and earned the No. 3 seed in the West in the NBA Cup knockout round. If they’re going to advance, they’ll do so without their superstar center.

    Victor Wembanyama's return to the court will have to wait.

    Victor Wembanyama’s return to the court will have to wait.

    (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

    That will mean continued reliance on De’Aaron Fox (24.3 ppg, 6.5 apg), Stephon Castle (17.4 ppg, 7.4 apg) and Devin Vassell (15.7 ppg, 3.7 rpg) to carry the load in Wembanyama’s absence.

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    It has been a formula for success so far. But the Spurs are certainly hoping they don’t have to lean on it much longer.

    Wembanyama practiced with his Spurs teammates on Sunday ahead of a Monday win over the Pelicans. It was a welcome sight for his teammates and head coach Mitch Johnson.

    “It was a pretty cool moment,” Johnson said, per the San Antonio Express-News. “I’m looking forward to getting [Wembanyama] back. He’s getting closer.”

    When Wembanyama does return, he’ll do so for a Spurs team in position to make its first run to the postseason since 2019 out of a loaded Western Conference.

  • MLB Draft: Lottery delivers shakeup after White Sox at No. 1; what does it mean for next year’s draft class?

    ORLANDO, Fla. — MLB held its fourth draft lottery on Tuesday at the winter meetings, with the results revealing that the Chicago White Sox hold the first overall pick in the 2026 MLB Draft, scheduled to begin Saturday, July 11, in Philadelphia in conjunction with All-Star week next summer.

    Since the league’s adoption of the lottery system in the latest CBA — the first edition was held at the 2022 winter meetings, with the Pittsburgh Pirates winning the No. 1 pick they would use to draft Paul Skenes in 2023 — no longer is the draft order based strictly on teams’ regular-season records. Instead, the first six selections of the draft are decided by a lottery system similar to the ones used in the NBA and the NHL, in which all non-playoff teams have a range of likelihoods of receiving the top pick. This was introduced in an effort to disincentivize teams from racking up as many losses as possible en route to guaranteed premium draft positioning.

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    There are also rules that prevent teams from being lottery-eligible in consecutive years, which impacted three clubs in this year’s drawing. Teams that receive revenue sharing cannot be included in the lottery three years in a row, which meant the 119-loss Colorado Rockies — after picking third in 2024 and fourth in 2025 — were unable to draft higher than 10th in 2026. Teams that pay into the revenue-sharing pool (larger-market teams) cannot be lottery-eligible two years in a row; this impacted the Nationals and Angels after they drafted No. 1 and No. 2 this year. In 2026, they will select 11th and 12th, respectively.

    The lottery featured at least one significant jump in draft position in its first three editions, introducing an element of unpredictability that resulted in some teams selecting much earlier in the first round than anticipated. The Twins had a 1.7% chance to land the fifth overall pick in the 2023 draft, but the lottery smiling upon them enabled Minnesota to select Walker Jenkins, who is now one of baseball’s top prospects.

    In 2024, the Cleveland Guardians won the first overall pick (Travis Bazzana) with just a 2% likelihood, and the Cincinnati Reds selected second overall (Chase Burns) despite a 1% chance of such an outcome. In the lottery last year, the Seattle Mariners — already featuring a loaded farm system and having won 85 games in 2024 — cashed in on a 0.7% chance and jumped up to the third pick, which they used on left-hander Kade Anderson, widely considered the best pitcher available in his class.

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    These stunning shake-ups have made the lottery a compelling event for the front offices of the teams involved, and this year was no different. While the White Sox snagging the top selection wasn’t a stunner — Chicago held the best odds of any team to get the pick, at 27.73% — there were several results that reminded everyone of the chaotic randomness a lottery can produce.

    Which teams enjoyed the biggest lottery jumps?

    Three teams in particular — the Rays, Giants and Royals — enjoyed notable strokes of luck, marking an exciting start to this year’s draft cycle. On the flip side, a few teams with considerably worse 2025 records — the Twins, Orioles and Cardinals — saw their first-round picks drop relative to their place in the reverse standings.

    Coming off a 77-85 finish — their worst record since 2016 but hardly a horrible mark, all things considered — the Rays entered the lottery with a 3.03% chance of winning the top overall pick yet jumped all the way to No. 2. This will be the first time Tampa Bay has picked in the top 10 since they took Brendan McKay fourth overall in 2017, and it’s their highest selection since the Rays had consecutive No. 1 picks in 2007 and 2008, yielding David Price and Tim Beckham.

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    Meanwhile, Kansas City and San Francisco reaped the benefits of an even less likely draw. The Royals’ 82-80 finish gave them some of the lowest odds (0.8%) to jump to the top of the board of any lottery-eligible team, yet they leapt all the way to the sixth pick, affording Kansas City its seventh top-10 pick in the past eight drafts. The Giants’ 81-81 finish gave them a 1% outlook of landing the top pick, yet San Francisco launched up the board to pick No. 4, the franchise’s earliest selection since taking Joey Bart second in 2018.

    That these clubs will get to draft earlier than expected is exciting on its own, but it’s about more than just having fewer teams ahead of them on the board. Higher picks also come with larger associated bonus pool slots, which can afford clubs a greater amount of flexibility when allocating their resources over the course of an entire draft.

    Who is the likely 2026 No. 1 pick?

    With the draft order settled, we are at the earliest stages of being able to speculate about which amateur prospects could be in play for the teams picking at the top come July. And while teams’ draft boards are sure to shuffle many times in the months ahead, the results of this year’s lottery carried more weight than usual considering there is a consensus best player in the class, at least for now: UCLA shortstop Roch Cholowsky.

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    It’s far too early to guarantee that the White Sox will select Cholowsky with the first pick next summer, but it’s undeniable that the shortstop has separated himself from his peers at this stage of the process. The son of Dan Cholowsky, who was selected 39th overall out of Cal-Berkeley by the Cardinals in 1991 and played eight minor-league seasons before becoming a scout, Roch (pronounced Rock) was a highly coveted prep prospect at Hamilton High School in Arizona but opted to go to college to raise his stock even further.

    So far, Cholowsky been wildly successful in that endeavor, starring immediately for the Bruins as a freshman and elevating his game further as a sophomore in 2025, slashing a gaudy .353/.480/.710 with 23 homers and an impressively low 9.3% strikeout rate, all while playing stellar defense at shortstop. Assuming Cholowsky stays healthy and has another monster spring season as a junior for a loaded Bruins team coming off a trip to the College World Series, it’s difficult to envision another prospect unseating him atop this year’s class.

    Who else is at the top of the class?

    That’s not to say there aren’t other ultra-talented alternatives who could emerge next spring, whether for the White Sox with pick No. 1 or the cluster of clubs right after them. Beyond Cholowsky, there’s a pair of excellent high school shortstops who could be jockeying for position as the first prep player off the board: Grady Emerson and Jacob Lombard.

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    Emerson is a tremendously advanced left-handed bat from Texas whom some evaluators consider to be in the top tier alongside Cholowsky and who could separate himself from the rest of the high school class with a big senior year. Lombard is a right-handed hitter from Florida who is the younger brother of Yankees prospect George Lombard Jr. and whose outlandish athleticism arguably gives him a higher ceiling than Emerson, though his hit tool isn’t quite as polished. Tyler Spangler is another prep infielder who could play his way into the first few picks, though his commitment to Stanford makes him less of a solid bet to start his pro career next year.

    On the college side, Alabama shortstop Justin Lebron is an electric athlete whose star power has been on full display during his first two years in Tuscaloosa, but he’ll have to demonstrate that his hit tool can thrive against SEC competition as a junior. Georgia Tech’s Drew Burress presents an unusual profile as a 5-foot-9, right-handed-hitting outfielder, but he has serious right-handed power and might be able to stick in center field. AJ Gracia (Virginia), Sawyer Strosnider (TCU) and Derek Curiel (LSU) are three other college outfielders who fit the more traditional mold of sweet-swinging, left-handed hitters who should be selected early in Round 1.

    On the mound, the high school crop features three left-handers who could emerge as viable top-five picks with big springs: Carson Bolemon from South Carolina, Gio Rojas from Florida and Logan Schmidt from California. We’re still waiting for a frontline arm to separate itself atop the college class, but the two pitchers who look like first-round locks right now are Florida’s Liam Peterson and Coastal Carolina’s Cameron Flukey.

  • Phillip Rivers unretires?! + Do the Eagles have a Jalen Hurts problem after MNF collapse? (ft. Zach Berman)

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    Could 44-year-old Philip Rivers help the ailing Colts? Yahoo Sports’ Andrew Siciliano, Charles Robinson, and Frank Schwab break down that scenario as well as the MNF matchup that saw the Los Angeles Chargers beat the Philadelphia Eagles. Later, Andrew sits down with The Athletic’s Eagles reporter, Zach Berman, to talk all things Philly and Jalen Hurts. Finally, the crew looks at what teams could make it into the playoffs according to Frank’s projections before giving their “One More Thing.”

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    (0:36) – Philip Rivers signs to Colts’ practice squad

    (19:48) – Chargers beat Eagles on MNF

    (33:51) – Zach Berman joins the show!

    (47:57) – Frank’s Week 14 Playoff Projections

    (1:03:18) – One More Thing

    Could 44-year-old Philip Rivers help the ailing Indianapolis Colts? (Photo by Joe Sargent/Getty Images)

    Could 44-year-old Philip Rivers help the ailing Indianapolis Colts? (Photo by Joe Sargent/Getty Images)

    (Photo by Joe Sargent/Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at Yahoo Sports Podcasts

  • Kyle Schwarber among 4 new players announced for USA’s World Baseball Classic roster on same day he secures $150M deal

    Tuesday was a good day to be Kyle Schwarber.

    The Philadelphia slugger agreed to a five-year, $150 million contract to remain with the Phillies. And he was announced as one of four new players named to USA’s World Baseball Classic team.

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    USA Baseball announced Tuesday that Schwarber, Orioles shortstop Gunnar Henderson, Brewers second baseman Brice Turang and Dodgers catcher Will Smith will join a WBC roster already laden with MLB stars.

    Aaron Judge, Cal Raleigh, Paul Skenes and Bobby Witt Jr. are among the players previously selected to play for Team USA in the international competition that will commence in March. Judge will serve as captain in his first WBC appearance.

    Judge is a three-time MVP. Skenes is a unanimous Cy Young Winner. And Schwarber and Raleigh were both MVP finalists in 2025.

    USA Baseball announced the new additions via multiple social media posts, including one featuring Schwarber’s 10-pitch at-bat in the 2023 WBC championship game vs. Japan that ended with a solo home run to cut Japan’s lead to 3-2.

    Schwarber’s blast wasn’t enough to propel USA to victory. Against a Japan team that sent out Shohei Ohtani as its closer, USA didn’t score again as Japan secured a 3-2 victory to win the tournament.

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    Ohtani will be playing for Japan again in March, fresh off securing his fourth MLB MVP award in five seasons. And Japan will be seeking its fourth championship after winning three of the five previous WBCs (2006, 2009, 2023).

    The Dominican Republic won in 2013. And Team USA will be seeking its second title after winning in 2017.

    USA Baseball’s WBC roster

    Here’s what Team USA’s roster looks like so far, with more additions to come:

    Paul Skenes, SP, Pittsburgh Pirates
    Matthew Boyd, SP, Chicago Cubs
    Cal Raleigh, C, Seattle Mariners
    Will Smith, C, Los Angeles Dodgers
    Brice Turang, 2B, Milwaukee Brewers
    Bobby Witt Jr., SS, Kansas City Royals
    Gunnar Henderson, SS, Baltimore Orioles
    Aaron Judge, OF, New York Yankees
    Corbin Carroll, OF, Arizona Diamondbacks
    Pete Crow-Armstrong, OF, Chicago Cubs
    Kyle Schwarber, DH, Philadelphia Phillies