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  • NFL to launch and fund professional flag football league with sport set to join Olympics in 2028

    The NFL is gearing up for the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. With the event just a few years away, the league voted Wednesday to fund and launch a professional flag football league, the NFL announced.

    The move allows the NFL to enter into an agreement with a partner and invest up to $32 million in the league. NFL executive vice president of football operations Troy Vincent said Wednesday that the move was “a critical step in establishing flag football as a premier global sport.”

    “Today’s vote represents a critical step in establishing flag football as a premier global sport. We are developing the infrastructure to accelerate the game’s growth to new heights by creating a clear pathway for aspiring athletes to progress from youth and high school programs through college and now to the professional level. We look forward to forming a partnership to bring this vision to life and deliver a world-class professional flag football experience for elite athletes and fans alike.”

    By announcing the creation of a new professional flag football league, the NFL is capitalizing on the sport, which it described as one of the “fastest growing” around the world. It is also making sure it can develop players ahead of the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. The 2028 Olympics will mark the first time flag football will be included as an Olympic sport.

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    In May, the NFL approved a resolution allowing NFL players to participate in flag football at the 2028 Olympics. Injury protection and salary cap credit will be offered to NFL teams that lose players to injury during the Olympics.

    There are restrictions on how many players an NFL team can send to the 2028 Olympics. Each club will allow up to one of their players to play on each country’s team.

    Minnesota Vikings wideout Justin Jefferson is among the players who have expressed interest in taking part in the Olympics. He was present when the league voted to allow NFL players to take part in the games, saying it was a “dream” to win a gold medal.

  • Fantasy Football Target Trends: 3 big-name players doing their best Diontae Johnson impression

    There isn’t a buzzy winner for the Diontae Johnson Award this year — the player who gets all of the targets, none of the touchdowns. Every player with 67 targets or more this year has found the end zone. Cade Otton sits at 66 targets with no touchdowns, and he might stay there for a while — he’s listed as doubtful for Week 15. Chig Okonkwo (53 targets) and Kendrick Bourne (43 targets) are also working on a bagel, but it’s not like we expected miracles from these guys. They’re not part of the story.

    So let’s focus on the heavily-targeted players who have run poorly with touchdowns — while not sitting on a zero — and see what we make of it.

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    WR Justin Jefferson (109 targets, two touchdowns)

    It’s been a nightmare season for the first-round pick, as he sits 10th in targets but is merely the WR25. He hasn’t topped 80 yards since Week 5 and he’s scored just once in his last 12 games.

    Maybe it seems too convenient to blame everything on J.J. McCarthy’s growing pains, but that’s probably the right conclusion. Consider that Carson Wentz and McCarthy have both targeted Jefferson roughly the same amount of times in 2025, with very different results:

    – Wentz to Jefferson: 34-for-50 (68.0%), 477 yards, 9.5 YPA
    – McCarthy to Jefferson: 28-for-53 (52.8%), 329 yards, 6.2 YPA

    Both of the touchdowns came from McCarthy, but McCarthy also has six picks when targeting Jefferson (Wertz had two). Wentz posted an 81.8 passer rating when targeting Jefferson, while McCarthy is down at 45.0.

    Jefferson holds an optimistic WR16 consensus rank this week, in part because the Cowboys are such a favorable draw. But it’s likely this problem won’t really be sorted out until next year, when the Vikings can bring in stronger competition for McCarthy. The Minnesota infrastructure still has plenty to attract an interesting free agent — Kevin O’Connell is a respected play-caller and QB developer, and Jefferson and Jordan Addison are appealing targets. I’ll be open to a Jefferson bounce-back in 2026, but I will not start him proactively the rest of this season.

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    WR Zay Flowers (95 targets, one touchdown)

    This one especially stings, as I had a third-year Flowers breakout on my 2025 menu. He had a 7-143-1 explosion in the opening week loss at Buffalo, and hasn’t scored a touchdown since.

    You can’t argue with the overall opportunity. Flowers is 16th in targets, 12th in catches, eighth in yards. His yards per target (9.4) is a career high; so is his catch rate (71.6%). When Lamar Jackson targets Flowers, the results are lovely: 10.4 YPA, 108.7 rating.

    The poor touchdown count is a little bad luck. Flowers has been tackled inside the 10-yard line on seven different receptions. But we also need to understand the Ravens don’t throw to Flowers much from in close — he has just two targets inside the 10 and a modest seven targets inside the 20.

    Before the year, Flowers was a career-arc pick (entering Season 3) and a bet-on-talent pick, the idea that a wideout this skilled surely could score more than 4-5 touchdowns when tied to an MVP-contending quarterback. Flowers has obviously been hurt by Jackson missing time this year and also by Jackson’s struggles since returning, though the Baltimore offense looked better last week. But until the Ravens find a way to unlock Flowers in the tighter areas — and remember, he’s a modest 5-foot-9, 175 pounds — we’re talking about a player who will routinely smash between the 20s but likely struggle to score touchdowns.

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    TE Kyle Pitts Sr. (85 targets, one touchdown)

    I’m not here to take gratuitous shots at Pitts, who’s been useful for fantasy managers lately. He checked in as TE6 and TE7 the last two weeks, and if you grade all tight ends from Week 7 onward, he’s the TE11. That’s a player worth rostering, and often a player worth starting.

    Just don’t look for him in the end zone, of course.

    This is a long-running theme for Pitts’ career — he’s scored just 11 times in 74 pro games, and never more than four in any season. And the Falcons aren’t trying to unlock Pitts as a touchdown scorer this year.

    Consider the usage trends on Pitts. He has the third-highest market share (20.3%) of all tight ends, and the sixth-highest first-read rate (21.0%). The Falcons like throwing to Pitts, just not in the scoring area. He’s seen just one end-zone target all year (Trey McBride leads with 15) and he has just five red-zone targets for the season (that’s behind players like Gunnar Helm, Dawson Knox, Tyler Higbee and Ja’Tavion Sanders). This isn’t a case of bad luck on Pitts, it actually represents a choice from the Atlanta coaching staff.

    The Falcons are a disappointing 4-9 and will likely clean house after the season. Given that Pitts is still fairly young (he turns 26 next October), I might be willing to take him as an upside TE2/TE3 in the latter stages of next summer’s drafts, provided the right offensive mind takes over this team and decides to bring him back (he’ll be an unrestricted free agent this offseason) or he lands somewhere else intriguing.

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    Top-5 target earners at each position from Week 14

    Wide Receiver

    Player

    Targets

    Receptions

    Target Share

    Michael Wilson, Cardinals

    16

    11

    36.4%

    Ryan Flournoy, Cowboys

    13

    9

    27.7%

    A.J. Brown, Eagles

    13

    6

    34.2%

    Michael Pittman Jr., Colts

    12

    9

    33.3%

    DK Metcalf, Steelers

    12

    7

    36.4%

    Running Back

    Player

    Targets

    Receptions

    Target Share

    Jahmyr Gibbs, Lions

    7

    7

    22.6%

    Kenneth Gainwell, Steelers

    7

    6

    21.2%

    Bam Knight, Cardinals

    6

    3

    13.6%

    RJ Harvey, Broncos

    6

    6

    16.7%

    Dylan Sampson, Browns

    6

    5

    15.8%

    Tight End

    Player

    Targets

    Receptions

    Target Share

    Harold Fannin Jr., Browns

    11

    8

    28.9%

    Kyle Pitts Sr., Falcons

    10

    6

    35.7%

    Dallas Goedert, Eagles

    10

    8

    26.3%

    Trey McBride, Cardinals

    9

    5

    20.5%

    Mason Taylor, Jets

    8

    5

    25%

  • Mavericks center Dereck Lively II will undergo season-ending right foot surgery

    Dallas Mavericks center Dereck Lively II has played his last game of the 2025-26 season as he’ll undergo season-ending surgery on his right foot, the team announced on Wednesday.

    Lively has played in seven of the Mavs’ 25 games this season and has been dealing with persistent right foot discomfort. The third-year 7-footer has been Dallas’ defensive anchor up front, averaging 1.6 blocks per game and acting as a deterrent in the paint. Lively has been out of the lineup since Nov. 22.

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    This marks another chapter in an injury-plagued season for Dallas. Veteran forward Anthony Davis returned from his own stint on the injured list in late November. Davis has been solid when healthy, averaging 19.6 points and 10.2 rebounds per game, but he’s only been available for 10 games. He has played in four consecutive games since Dec. 1, with the team winning three of those.

    Point guard Kyrie Irving has not played this season as he continues to recover from a torn ACL suffered last season. Center Daniel Gafford has been in and out of the lineup early this season and is currently sidelined with an ankle injury. He has appeared in just 15 of the team’s 25 games so far. Klay Thompson has been dealing with knee soreness and was inactive for the team’s win over Houston on Saturday. Nonetheless, Thompson has played in 23 games.

    There’s been a lot of chaos surrounding this team since the Luka Dončić trade to the Lakers last season. Since then, the team selected Cooper Flagg with the No. 1 pick in the draft, fired former general manager Nico Harrison earlier this season and there are ongoing trade rumors involving Davis.

    The Mavs are currently 9-16, sitting in 11th place in the Western Conference and were eliminated in the group play stage of the NBA Cup.

  • Robert Wright drains wild buzzer-beater to complete comeback, lift No. 10 BYU past Clemson

    Robert Wright completed a massive comeback on Tuesday night with an incredible buzzer-beater at Madison Square Garden.

    The Cougars guard drained a game-winning 3-pointer as time expired to lift No. 10 BYU to a wild 67-64 win over Clemson in the Jimmy V Classic. That capped a 22-point comeback in the second half to avoid what would have been a significant upset loss for the Cougars as they wrap up their nonconference slate.

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    After entering the locker room down by 21 points — BYU’s last made bucket in the first half came on a made 3-pointer from Wright with 6:59 left in the period — the Cougars slowly started chipping away at that deficit. They took the lead again late in the second half on a Keba Keita dunk, but Dillon Hunter made a layup with just five seconds left to tie the game for Clemson. That set up Wright’s final sequence.

    After a BYU timeout, Wright caught an inbound pass with just 1.3 seconds left in the game and immediately fired between a pair of Clemson guards, completely off balance. The shot was perfect. Naturally, that sparked a huge celebration in the corner of the court.

    Jestin Porter led Clemson with 17 points after he went 5-of-9 from the 3-point line. Porter was the only Clemson starter to hit double figures. The Tigers closed the opening half on a 21-0 run that spanned nearly seven full minutes and forced 10 straight missed shots from BYU. Jake Wahlin hit a free throw to start the second half to get the Tigers up by 22 points.

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    But that’s when Clemson’s offense just shut down. They managed just 21 points in the second half and scored only four points over the first 11 minutes of the second half while letting BYU right back in the game.

    Clemson now holds a 7-3 record and has lost in back-to-back games after falling to No. 12 Alabama by six points last week in the ACC-SEC Challenge.

    Wright finished with 17 points and went 3-of-5 from the 3-point line in the win for BYU. AJ Dybantsa led the way with 28 points, 9 rebounds and 6 assists. BYU now sits at 8-1 on the season and has won five straight after it fell to then-No. 3 UConn on the road last month. Tuesday’s game with Clemson marked BYU’s last true test before conference play starts next month.

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    While the Cougars should be a significant force in the Big 12 this season, especially when Dybantsa performs like the potential lottery pick many expect him to be in the NBA Draft in a few months, they certainly don’t look unbeatable. But they got the job done on Tuesday night. For now, that’s all that matters.

  • Fallout of Edwin Díaz Dashing to the Dodgers, Scott Boras Holds Court at the Winter Meetings & White Sox Win Big

    Subscribe to Baseball Bar-B-Cast

    Reactions are still coming in following the shocking news of Edwin Díaz leaving the New York Mets after six seasons and joining the reigning back-to-back champion Los Angeles Dodgers. We’re starting to get a better picture of what led the All-Star closer to take his talents out west.

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    On this episode of Baseball Bar-B-Cast, Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman get into the offer that the Mets made to try to keep Díaz. While they fell short on the dollars side, some are left wondering if the reliever simply wanted to join Los Angeles instead. The question now is: Where do the Mets go from here?

    Later, Jake and Jordan talk about super-agent Scott Boras giving his annual address at the Winter Meetings, where he discusses all of the big free agents he’s trying to secure deals for. Then the guys talk about all the other transactions that went down in Orlando, including the Chicago White Sox winning the MLB Draft lottery and getting the first overall pick in next year’s draft.

    Dustin Bradford/Getty Images

    Dustin Bradford/Getty Images

    (Dustin Bradford/Getty Images)

    2:29 – Díaz-to-Dodgers fallout

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    11:09 – Scott Boras scoreboard update

    31:55 – Around the League: Winter Meetings

    36:42 – White Sox win draft lottery

    🖥️ 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

  • Kenny Pickett reportedly in line to start for Raiders vs. Eagles, with Geno Smith sidelined by shoulder injury

    Kenny Pickett won a Super Bowl ring as the Philadelphia Eagles’ backup quarterback. Less than a year later, he’s in line to start against his former team at Lincoln Financial Field.

    Pickett is expected to fill in for Las Vegas Raiders quarterback Geno Smith, who, according to NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport, is unlikely to start Sunday because of a right shoulder injury.

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    Smith, 35, won’t practice Wednesday, per Rapoport. The one-time NFL Comeback Player of the Year and two-time Pro Bowler exited a 24-17 loss to the Denver Broncos this past Sunday at the end of the third quarter.

    [Get more Raiders news: Las Vegas team feed]

    Raiders head coach Pete Carroll told reporters, per ESPN, that Smith’s shoulder “locked up” when the veteran got hit while delivering a 3-yard pass to tight end Brock Bowers. Pickett, a 2022 first-round pick of the Pittsburgh Steelers who has been traded three times since the end of the 2023 season, replaced Smith for the entire fourth quarter, during which he completed 8-of-11 passes for 97 yards and a touchdown.

    Las Vegas is 2-11 and has been slumping to dead last in the AFC West with seven straight defeats. The Raiders traded for Smith this past offseason and signed him to a two-year, $75 million extension. That move reunited Smith with Carroll, with whom he resurrected his career with in Seattle.

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    Smith hasn’t enjoyed the same success in Vegas, though. A struggling Raiders offensive line has made life hard for the 2013 second-round pick and New York Jets castaway. Smith has taken 49 sacks, tied with Tennessee Titans rookie quarterback Cam Ward for the most in the NFL. Smith is also tied with the Miami Dolphins’ Tua Tagovailoa for the most interceptions in the league, with 14 thrown through 13 games.

    Raiders offensive coordinator Chip Kelly was fired midseason. He was let go after the Raiders’ Week 12 loss to the Cleveland Browns. Smith was sacked 10 times that day. After the game, Smith, who was even booed pregame, frustratedly flipped off fans in Allegiant Stadium.

    Pickett, 27, backed up Jalen Hurts last season, appearing in five regular-season games. He won his only start of the season, a 41-7 drubbing of the NFC East rival Dallas Cowboys. Pickett even got to take the field during the Super Bowl, stepping in for garbage time snaps during the Eagles’ blowout victory over the Kansas City Chiefs.

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    He arrived in Philadelphia after going 14-10 as the Steelers’ starter over the 2022-23 seasons. He competed for the Cleveland Browns’ starting job this summer before being traded to the Raiders.

    If Pickett does in fact get the nod Sunday in Philadelphia, he’ll try to spark a Raiders offense that hasn’t scored more than 17 points since a 30-29 overtime loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars in Week 9.

  • Buccaneers’ Todd Bowles indicates WR Mike Evans will return from collarbone injury Thursday against Falcons

    Mike Evans’ streak of 11 straight 1,000-yard receiving seasons — tied with Jerry Rice for the most consecutive all-time — is on its last legs. The prolific Tampa Bay Buccaneers wideout has played in only four games during the 2025 campaign.

    The 32-year-old can help extend another streak, though.

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    The 7-6 Bucs are trying to hold off the Carolina Panthers to win their fifth consecutive NFC South title, and they’re expecting Evans back for their stretch run. That starts Thursday night against the Atlanta Falcons.

    Head coach Todd Bowles said Wednesday that the six-time Pro Bowl receiver has shown enough progress in his recovery from the collarbone injury he suffered in Week 7 against the Detroit Lions to make his return against the Atlanta Falcons, according to Greg Auman of Fox Sports. The Bucs officially activated Evans and fellow receiver Jalen McMillan from injured reserve later in the day.

    The broken clavicle is one of three injuries Evans has dealt with this season. After stacking five receptions and at least 50 receiving yards in each of his first two games, he strained a hamstring in Week 3 against the New York Jets.

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    That injury cost him three games. When he returned against the Lions for “Monday Night Football” on Oct. 20, he didn’t make it through one half without another setback.

    Actually, he experienced a pair of them on the same play. In the second quarter of the prime-time affair, Evans ran a deep route, with Lions cornerback Rock Ya-Sin in coverage. Evans dove and extended for what appeared to be an impressive reception, however, the ball came loose as he took a hard fall. His shoulder and head bore the brunt of the impact, resulting in not only his collarbone injury but also a concussion.

    Evans was down motionless for a few moments after the play. While he was able to walk off the field with athletic trainers at his side, he appeared unsteady. Ultimately, Evans was carted off to the locker room.

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    The Bucs opened Evans’ 21-day practice window last week. After being limited all week, he didn’t play this past Sunday during a 24-20 loss to the New Orleans Saints. But Evans is trending toward a return versus the Falcons.

    That will be a boost for quarterback Baker Mayfield, who has been battling through a left shoulder injury of late.

    Tampa Bay has lost four of its past five games following its 6-2 start to the season. The Bucs have four games remaining and still have to play the 7-6 Panthers twice.

    Those matchups will likely decide the division. Evans’ return could tip the scale.

  • Rookie Report: First-year players set to deliver in fantasy playoffs and bring home championships

    Instead of another broad look at the rookie class, I want to drill down on impact. Which first-year players are actually going to decide fantasy championships over the next three weeks. Which rookies are going to be in starting lineups when trophies get raised and payments hit the group chat in Week 17?

    These are the five rookies I expect to have the biggest impact on crowning fantasy championships three weeks from now, and why.

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    Emeka Egbuka, WR, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

    This one is tough and I know fantasy managers do not want to hear it right now because of how bad Egbuka has been. Since Week 6, he has averaged less than 10 fantasy points per game and it has felt like he is sinking your lineup every time you click start. He has absolutely left some plays on the field himself, but he is still getting the opportunity. If we are talking about rookies who are going to impact fantasy football championships three weeks from now, Egbuka still belongs on that list even if it does not feel like it today.

    And yes, Baker Mayfield has to play better. This is not just an Egbuka thing. Baker has not been good this season. But my goodness, this playoff schedule for Tampa Bay is as good as it gets. Falcons, Panthers and Dolphins, three defenses that can absolutely be had through the air. When you zoom out and look at the usage, the raw data still screams you do not bench this dude. Egbuka is seventh in the NFL in total targets, top 15 in target share and top 10 in routes run. He is sixth in air yards, eighth in red-zone targets and sixth in deep targets.

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    If there is an obvious star on your roster, you roll with that star, but this level of volume on this schedule is exactly the kind of usage that can swing fantasy playoffs. Egbuka still has the talent and opportunity to make a massive championship impact — even with Mike Evans looking like he’ll return to action this week.

    TreVeyon Henderson, RB, New England Patriots

    Big Hendo finally showed us in Q3 why we held on through the early season mess. He went nuclear for a two-week stretch in November with five total touchdowns, then cooled off before the bye with two straight games under 100 total yards and no scores. That lull plus Rhamondre Stevenson’s return has people nervous, but the usage still points to Henderson being on a lot of championship rosters.

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    In Rhamondre’s first game back, Henderson handled 18 carries to Stevenson’s six. The next week before the, bye it was 12 carries for Rhamondre and 11 for Henderson, with both backs earning three receptions. That is basically a split, which is fine when you are attached to one of the best offenses in football led by potential MVP candidate Drake Maye, who is playing at a historic clip from an efficiency standpoint at quarterback. We know New England trusts Henderson in high-leverage situations and we know he has the juice to flip a matchup on one drive.

    The playoff schedule lines up: Bills, Ravens and then the Jets in Week 17. That Jets matchup should have every manager’s attention. The last time Henderson saw New York, he hung three touchdowns in a true breakout game. You are not chasing that single performance, but it is a reminder of what his ceiling looks like even with Rhamondre active. The fear from September is long gone. We know what he is in this backfield and the impact that he can make on any given week, any given play, any given touch is absolutely worthy of having the biggest impact on crowning a fantasy championship.

    Woody Marks, RB, Houston Texans

    Another rookie I expect to see on a ton of championship rosters is Woody Marks. He took an absolute beating in that Kansas City game yet Houston needed every one of those 26 rush attempts and he answered the call. This rookie out of USC is not the biggest back on the field but he runs like he does not know that. With Nick Chubb banged up and status unknown, there is even more room for Marks to own this backfield the rest of the way.

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    The volume has quietly been rock solid. Over his last 10 games, he has hit double-digit carries nine times. Since Week 10, he has not dipped below 14 rush attempts in a single outing. He only has one rushing touchdown over that stretch and he has not been heavily featured as a receiver, which might make the weekly box scores feel a little underwhelming. The reality is he is getting pure bell-cow work on a team that wants to play through its defense and run game.

    Now look at the playoff schedule: Cardinals, Raiders and Chargers. We just watched Saquon Barkley rip through that Chargers front. Houston’s defense is good enough to keep the offense in positive scripts which means a whole lot of Marks on the ground as the team tries to close out wins and lock up the AFC South. Marks is set up to be that rookie back you plug into the RB2 or flex spot every week and do not think twice. When the dust settles after Week 17, do not be surprised when you see Woody Marks sitting in more than a few fantasy championship lineups.

    Luther Burden III, WR, Chicago Bears

    On paper, you probably do not want any rookie wideout walking into playoff matchups against the Browns, Packers and 49ers. In most cases, you would just stay away. Luther Burden III is not that type of rookie. With Rome Odunze sidelined on a week-to-week timeline and Chicago fighting for its playoff life, Burden is about to find out what it looks like to be the grown man in the room.

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    DJ Moore just turned in a one-catch, minus-4 yard performance in a must-win game against Green Bay. The rushing attack is doing its job. The missing piece is a perimeter playmaker defenses actually fear. Over the last four games, Burden has quietly become that guy. At least five targets in every game. At least three receptions in every game. A carry in every game. Explosive plays every week. Chicago is already designing touches for him inside and out because he brings speed this receiver room badly needs.

    The Bears went from the top of the NFC to hanging onto a wild-card spot and they know it. They have to keep their foot on the gas to hold off Detroit and have a chance of catching Green Bay. That means leaning on the player who can flip a drive in one snap. Burden might not be as polished as Moore yet, but he is Chicago’s most dynamic weapon. He is the type of rookie wide receiver that can absolutely bring significant impact to your lineup based on the offense, his skill set and the opportunity available to him.

    Harold Fannin Jr., TE, Cleveland Browns

    I do not know if there will be a more impactful player at his position on fantasy football championship rosters than Harold Fannin Jr. The thing with Fannin is, the usage has been steady all year. He has not dipped below two receptions in any matchup this season and he has been under five targets only twice. That matters at tight end, where most people are praying for one or two usable weeks.

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    Now we finally get to see what it looks like when the offense actually runs through him. With Shedeur Sanders under center, this Browns unit looks functional. Not a juggernaut, not Mahomes and Kelce but competent enough to support a difference-maker at tight end. On the season, in half-PPR scoring per game, Fannin is sitting at TE11. If you zoom into the last three games with Sanders, he jumps to TE4, one of only five tight ends averaging double-digit half-PPR points over that stretch.

    Over the last three weeks, you see names like Colby Parkinson and Brenton Strange inside the top-10 TEs. In that landscape, a rookie who has locked in weekly targets, red-zone work and a young quarterback who clearly trusts him is exactly what you want to roll out through the fantasy playoffs. With matchups against the Bears, Bills and a hot-and-cold Steelers defense on deck, Fannin is live to be a tight end everyone is talking about when trophies get handed out.

  • 2026 NFL Draft: League shortens time between first-round picks from 10 to 8 minutes

    The NFL Draft is, generally, a slow process. With 10 minutes in between picks in the first round, the opening night of the event can last until nearly midnight Eastern Time despite starting almost five hours earlier.

    In an attempt to allow football fans to get more sleep, the NFL reportedly reduced time between first-round picks from 10 to 8 minutes. That new mandate will go into effect during the 2026 NFL Draft in Pittsburgh, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter.

    The move should wind up being a positive for fans, as the time between the biggest action — the picks — will be much shorter. While the change also means commentators will have less time to talk about every single team when on the clock, that’s probably a trade-off most fans will support.

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    The decision, however, could have a negative impact on one area of the draft. With the shortened time between picks, that puts more pressure on teams to complete trades quickly. It’s possible the change will make it tougher to see draft trades in the first round, at least until general managers adjust to losing two minutes between each pick.

    While that’s a concern, it’s probably not significant. Teams were reportedly on board with the decision to shorten time between picks, a sign executives feel they can still make deals and debate picks while on the clock.

    It’s also not the first time the NFL has cut down on time between picks during the draft. Prior to 2007, teams had 15 minutes to make their first-round selections. That number was dropped to 10 minutes for the 2008 NFL Draft.

    It’s unclear whether the NFL will look to shorten times in other rounds. NFL teams have seven minutes in between picks in the second round, five minutes in the third through six rounds and four minutes in the seventh round.

  • Reports: Penn State defensive coordinator Jim Knowles expected to take same position at Tennessee

    Jim Knowles looks to be headed to his third school in three seasons.

    According to multiple reports, the longtime college assistant is expected to become the new defensive coordinator at Tennessee after negotiating a buyout at Penn State.

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    Knowles arrived at Penn State after he coordinated Ohio State’s defense during the Buckeyes’ title run in 2024. He became the highest-paid defensive coordinator in the country at Penn State, but things did not go as planned for the team that was ranked No. 2 in the AP Top 25 to start the season.

    After a 3-0 start, Penn State lost three straight games to fall to 3-3. That third loss, a defeat to Northwestern, resulted in the firing of coach James Franklin. Penn State ended up losing six straight games before three straight wins to close out the season and a spot in the Pinstripe Bowl against fellow 2025 underachiever Clemson.

    The Nittany Lions allowed 21.4 points per game and 5.3 yards per play in 2025. Penn State allowed at least 30 points in four games, including a 38-14 loss to Ohio State on Nov. 1.

    The Buckeyes gave up the fewest points in the country a season ago at 12.9 as they rebounded from a Week 13 loss to Michigan to win four straight games in the College Football Playoff. Knowles departed the Buckeyes not long after the season to join their rival and Ohio State replaced him with longtime NFL coach Matt Patricia.

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    At Tennessee, Knowles would replace Tim Banks. The Volunteers gave up nearly 29 points per game and 5.5 yards a play in 2025 as opposing QBs threw for almost 250 yards per game. A season ago, Tennessee had one of the best defenses in college football and allowed just 189 passing yards per game.

    Knowles had been at Ohio State for three seasons before heading to Penn State. Prior to joining the Buckeyes, he was the defensive coordinator at Oklahoma State for four seasons and the defensive coordinator at Duke for eight seasons.