Blog

  • Tarik Skubal and Tigers reportedly have biggest arbitration gap in MLB history

    If Tarik Skubal is playing for another team on Opening Day of 2027, the Detroit Tigers will at least be able to say they made him a record-setting offer. It just won’t be a good record.

    Thursday saw MLB teams and players submit their filings for salary arbitration, a clerical move that sets up arbitration fights for further into the offseason. A player asks for one salary, his team asks for a different, lower salary, and then an arbitrator looks at the player’s accomplishments and decides which number to use for the season.

    Advertisement

    It’s not often the most thrilling day, but the numbers filed by Skubal and the Tigers were interesting for multiple reasons. Skubal asked for $32 million, while the Tigers offered $19 million, according to ESPN’s Jeff Passan.

    That $13 million gap is reportedly the widest in arbitration history by a large margin. And if Skubal wins, his $32 million salary would be the largest in arbitration history, besting Juan Soto’s $31 million with the New York Yankees in 2024.

    There’s no telling who will win. It will be up to the arbitrator to decide if Skubal is worth more or less than $25.5 million, the midpoint between the two sides. These decisions are based primarily on precedent, using past players with similar stats, and normally value more old-school numbers than what you’d find on a Baseball Savant page. Teams and players often avoid these battles because of the awkwardness of arguing why a guy deserves less money in front of said guy.

    Advertisement

    If we look at pitchers only, here are some recent big names and what they got in their final years of arbitration, which Skubal is entering. You be the judge on whether he should get more than they did:

    • Framber Valdez (2025): $18 million

    • Dylan Cease (2025): $13.75 million

    • Corbin Burnes (2024): $15.6 million

    • Max Fried (2024): $15 million

    • Julio Urías (2023): $14.25 million

    Notably, all of those numbers were reached via agreement, not arb hearing.

    [Get more Tigers news: Detroit team feed]

    Whichever side wins the Tigers’ hearing, Skubal will be receiving the largest arbitration salary for a pitcher in MLB history.

    That, of course, makes sense, because no recent MLB pitcher has had Skubal’s résumé while still in arbitration. Skubal has been the easy pick for the best pitcher in baseball over the past two years, with two Cy Young Awards and a Triple Crown in 2024. Besides Skubal, six pitchers have won multiple Cy Youngs in the past 15 years — Clayton Kershaw, Justin Verlander, Max Scherzer, Corey Kluber, Jacob deGrom and Blake Snell — and none of them entered arbitration after the second trophy.

    Advertisement

    That’s because teams usually do whatever they can to keep that kind of player, but that effort hasn’t been fruitful for the Tigers so far. Skubal is slated to enter free agency after 2026, and he and the Tigers have been reported to be so far apart in negotiations for an extension that a trade could be on the table.

    The fact that their arbitration filings exhibit a similar chasm between the two sides underscores how unlikely a deal appears to be.

  • Chargers-Patriots NFL wild-card playoff preview: Drake Maye mania gets prime-time treatment vs. Jim Harbaugh

    Welcome back to the playoffs, New England Patriots.

    The last time we saw the Patriot Way grace us this deep into January, New England got drilled in Buffalo with Mac Jones leading the way at quarterback in the 2021 season. New England’s last postseason home game happened to be the last time we saw Tom Brady in a Patriots uniform, suffering an upset loss to Mike Vrabel and the Tennessee Titans in the 2019 season’s playoffs.

    Advertisement

    Speaking of Vrabel, he’s back, this time in familiar digs as New England’s head coach. But all eyes will be mainly focused on his quarterback, Drake Maye, who is in a tight MVP race with the Los Angeles Rams’ Matthew Stafford.

    Previous meeting this season

    The Chargers and Patriots didn’t play each other this season. The two teams matched up late in 2024 with Los Angeles winning decisively in New England, 40-7. Maye passed for only 117 yards, his worst game as a full-time starter during his rookie season.

    On the other side, Justin Herbert posted the kind of performance the Chargers will need from him Sunday night. He threw for 281 yards and three touchdowns, two of those scoring passes going to Ladd McConkey, who finished with 94 yards. J.K. Dobbins (now with the Broncos) rushed for 76 yards.

    Advertisement

    Health update

    The Patriots have no major injuries to deal with going into Sunday. But five players missed practice this week due to illness and the team will hope more don’t come down with a bug leading up to kickoff. For the Chargers, starting running back Omarion Hampton — the team’s second-leading rusher — hasn’t practiced all week due to an ankle issue that sidelined him for eight games this season. Edge rusher Bud Dupree has also missed practice.

    The head coaches

    It’s Michigan vs. Ohio State on the opposing sidelines.

    Vrabel is a leading candidate for Coach of the Year honors after turning New England around from a 4-13 slog in 2024 to a 13-4 resurgence this season. He has a 3-5 playoff record, which includes the Tennessee Titans’ run to the AFC championship game in the 2019 season. Harbaugh boasts a 5-4 mark, which includes three consecutive NFC championship games with the San Francisco 49ers and an appearance in Super Bowl XLVII. Yet the Chargers lost in last season’s wild-card round, 32-12, to the Houston Texans.

    Key player for the Chargers

    As Herbert goes, so do the Chargers. Last season, he threw four interceptions in Los Angeles’ playoff defeat. This season, when he didn’t play well, the Chargers typically couldn’t overcome those poor performances. (The lone exception was Week 14’s 22-19 overtime win over the Philadelphia Eagles, in which Herbert threw for only 139 yards.) However, the Patriots may provide an ideal matchup for Herbert to shine. New England allowed 4,459 passing yards this season and 8.9 yards per throw, both worst in the AFC. And only the Bengals gave up more TD passes (36) this season than the Patriots’ 31 among conference teams.

    Advertisement

    Key player for the Patriots

    Maye has been viewed as an MVP candidate throughout the season. But he’ll face the NFL’s fourth-best pass defense (3,314 yards allowed) in the Chargers. Only two other teams had more interceptions than the 19 Los Angeles grabbed this season. So the Patriots may have to run the ball to win. That could suit them well, as they compiled the third-most rushing yards in the AFC. TreVeyon Henderson led the team with 911 yards and nine TDs. He ran for a season-high 148 yards and two scores in Week 15 versus the Bills.

    Prediction

    New England was actually better on the road (8-0) this season than at home (6-3). But temperatures in Foxborough, Massachusetts, are expected to be in the mid-30s by Sunday’s 8 p.m. ET kickoff, which isn’t ideal for a team coming from Los Angeles.

    Advertisement

    The conditions could make it difficult for both quarterbacks, which puts an emphasis on the running game. Maye should get more help in that regard than Herbert. The Patriots’ ability to control the line of scrimmage on offense with two talented running backs capable of rushing for 100 yards could be the difference.

    Patriots 24, Chargers 16

  • Fiesta Bowl: Ole Miss RB Kewan Lacy briefly leaves game after long TD run in loss to Miami

    Ole Miss RB Kewan Lacy didn’t immediately return to the Fiesta Bowl after suffering an apparent injury on a 73-yard touchdown run in the first half.

    The score at the start of the second quarter was Lacy’s second carry of the game. After the touchdown, he was replaced in the backfield by backup Logan Diggs. The ESPN broadcast referenced an apparent right hamstring injury for Lacy.

    Advertisement

    You can see that Lacy slowed up on the touchdown run as he broke free and replays showed that he appeared to be laboring as he got closer to the end zone.

    “They’re looking at him so we’ll figure out at halftime,” Ole Miss coach Pete Golding said in his halftime interview on ESPN. Lacy’s TD was the only one Ole Miss scored as the Rebels trailed 17-13 at the break.

    Lacy had two carries for 75 yards while Diggs had four carries and QB Trinidad Chambliss officially had three with sacks included.

    Lacy would return to the game in the second half but was mostly used as a decoy by the Ole Miss offense in the third quarter and largely ineffectual in the fourth quarter as the Rebels found more success through the air.

    Advertisement

    However, after Ole Miss went up 27-24 with just over three minutes left in the game, Miami mounted a drive of its own and QB Carson Beck scored on a short run with just 18 seconds left to win the game for the Hurricanes. (The Rebels had a Hail Mary attempt that fell incomplete.)

    Lacy was a star in 2025. He entered the game with 1,464 rushing yards on 295 carries and had scored 24 touchdowns counting his long run on Thursday night. He also had 28 catches for 173 yards. As Chambliss finished in the top 10 in the Heisman voting, Lacy was an equally important part of Ole Miss’ offense as the team made the College Football Playoff for the first time.

  • Ole Miss vs. Miami: Did refs miss pass interference penalty on Fiesta Bowl’s game-ending Hail Mary?

    The College Football Playoff semifinal between Ole Miss and Miami came down to one final Hail Mary. When the dust cleared, a few people seemed to think the officials had missed a key penalty.

    With six seconds remaining and down 31-27, Ole Miss found itself at Miami’s 35-yard line and had a chance for one last punch in what was already a wild ending. Quarterback Trinidad Chambliss got the ball to the end zone, but wide receiver De’Zhaun Stribling could only get a single, flailing hand on it as it landed.

    Advertisement

    The incomplete pass sealed a win for Miami, which will play Indiana or Oregon in the national championship game on Jan. 19.

    However, quite a few fans noticed some hard contact in the scramble for the ball. Stribling definitely noticed it, as he held up his hands after the play, wondering why a flag wasn’t coming.

    Further replay showed Miami defensive back Ethan O’Connor had his hand in Stribling’s collar as the ball arrived, and that Stribling was doing something similar to O’Connor.

    Penalties are rarely called on Hail Marys, as both receivers and defenders are often doing whatever they can to be at the top of the heap when the ball reaches the end zone. ESPN rules expert Bill LeMonnier believed the officials made the right decision with a no-call:

    “We have what we call mutual combat. Both players are getting their hands on each other. We’re going to leave that alone 99% of the time. I want to see one of them get a true, true advantage.”

    Had defensive pass interference been called, it would have been another, untimed play for Ole Miss at Miami’s 20-yard line. That would have still been a tough get, but it was better than what reality offered.

    Advertisement

    The play ends a chaotic but ultimately successful season for the Rebels, who went 11-1 in the regular season, beat Tulane and Georgia in the first two rounds of the College Football Playoffs and lost head coach Lane Kiffin to LSU in the process. That standoff over Kiffin’s exit threatened to overshadow the postseason for the program, but the players and new head coach Pete Golding still managed to play at a high level.

    The loss is also a tough break for Kiffin. Had his old program won, it would have been another $250,000 for him in LSU’s incredible bonus-matching agreement.

  • The 5 plays that defined Miami’s Fiesta Bowl win over Ole Miss

    Miami is playing for its first national title in over two decades after taking down Ole Miss 31-27 in the Fiesta Bowl on Thursday night. Here are the five plays that stood out in the No. 10 Hurricanes’ College Football Playoff semifinal win over the No. 6 Rebels.

    Kewan Lacy’s 73-yard TD run

    The star Ole Miss running back put the Rebels up 7-3 on the first play of the second quarter with his long TD run.

    But that TD came at a cost to Ole Miss. Lacy appeared to suffer a right hamstring injury as he approached the end zone. Replays showed that he appeared to be laboring as he slowed toward the goal line.

    Advertisement

    Lacy didn’t play another snap the rest of the quarter and Ole Miss coach Pete Golding said he’d be evaluated at halftime. Lacy returned to the game in the third quarter with a compression sleeve on his right leg. And he served as a decoy for much of the second half.

    Ole Miss threw the ball 19 straight times before Lacy got his first carry of the second half. He finished with 11 carries for 103 yards and a TD.

    Malachi Toney’s 36-yard TD catch

    Toney gave Miami a 24-19 lead with 5:04 to go when he caught a tunnel screen and raced 36 yards for a touchdown.

    The freshman wide receiver was targeted 10 times and had five catches for 81 yards. Hardly any of those catches were downfield, either. Tony ended the game with 77 yards after the catch; no other Miami player had more than 30.

    Advertisement

    Toney emerged as one of the most dynamic playmakers in college football as a freshman in 2025 and has more than 1,000 receiving yards. He also made an incredible catch that didn’t count later in the game. Had Toney gotten his entire foot down in bounds on this grab, we’d run out of words trying to describe how good it was.

    Dae’Quan Wright’s 24-yard TD catch

    It took Ole Miss less than two minutes to respond to Toney’s TD. Wright scored on the sixth play of a 75-yard drive to give Ole Miss a one-point lead before Trinidad Chambliss’ two-point pass to Caleb Odom put Ole Miss up 27-24.

    Wright found himself wide open on a corner route after the safety was late to follow him to the pylon. It was the third catch of the game for Wright as he finished with 64 yards receiving.

    Advertisement

    Carson Beck’s 3-yard TD rush

    After Toney’s touchdown came on Miami’s fourth play of a 75-yard drive, the Hurricanes needed a lot more plays to regain the lead. Carson Beck’s 3-yard TD with 18 seconds to go gave Miami a 31-27 lead.

    Beck’s run was the 15th play of a drive that took nearly three minutes for the Hurricanes.

    Beck attempted 12 passes on that drive as the Hurricanes also benefitted from a facemask penalty on Ole Mis defensive back Jaylon Braxton. He was called for a facemask as Beck threw toward Keelan Marion on the sideline with just under two minutes to go.

    The TD was Beck’s first rushing TD since he scored in a Week 3 win over USF. The Georgia transfer finished the game 23-of-37 passing for 268 yards and two touchdowns and an interception while he rushed for minus-6 yards when sacks were taken into account.

    Advertisement

    Trinidad Chambliss’ incomplete Hail Mary attempt

    Ole Miss’ chances of a comeback were farfetched after Beck’s score. The Rebels had just one timeout remaining but were at midfield with 13 seconds to go.

    The Rebels then got to the Miami 35-yard line with six seconds to go before Chambliss heaved a Hail Mary toward the end zone as time expired.

    Ole Miss fans understandably wanted pass interference on the Hail Mary. But it’s important to note that pass interference is hardly called on those attempts. And a penalty would not have guaranteed Ole Miss a legit chance at the win.

    If officials threw a flag on the play, the Rebels would simply have had an untimed down from the 20-yard line. Sure, it’s easier to score from the 20 than it is the 35-yard line, but it’s still a low-percentage play. Miami would have likely won the game even with a penalty. But did the penalty prevent De’Zhaun Stribling from catching the pass? He was able to tip the ball as it fell incomplete.

  • Carson Beck lifts Miami to CFP title game with late TD run to beat Ole Miss in Fiesta Bowl

    Carson Beck came to Miami to get the Hurricanes to the College Football Playoff. His TD run with 18 seconds to go in the Fiesta Bowl put the team in the national championship game.

    Beck isn’t known for his scrambling ability, but he rushed for the game-winning score in No. 10 Miami’s 31-27 win over No. 6 Ole Miss. It was Beck’s first rushing TD since he scored in Week 3 against South Florida. And it put Miami a win away from the school’s first title since the 2001 season.

    “That’s the perfect example of a guy — he feels supported, he’s hungry, he’s driven, he’s a great human being and all he wants to do is he wants to see his teammates have success,” Miami coach Mario Cristobal told ESPN after the game. “And that’s what we witnessed tonight. And Carson Beck, I can’t say enough great things about him. Love the guy, absolutely awesome.”

    Advertisement

    Ole Miss had just one timeout remaining after Beck’s TD and got to midfield with 13 seconds left. But since the score and extra point put Miami up four, the Rebels needed a TD, and Trinidad Chambliss’ Hail Mary throw from the 35-yard line fell incomplete.

    Beck’s touchdown capped a 15-play, 75-yard drive that took nearly three minutes. It happened after Ole Miss took a 27-24 lead on a 24-yard pass from Chambliss to Dae’Quan Wright with 3:13 to go.

    Miami entered the College Football Playoff as the last team in the field. The Hurricanes controversially jumped Notre Dame in the final set of rankings for the last at-large berth in the field.

    Advertisement

    The spot in the playoff wasn’t controversial because of Miami’s record. Or the Hurricanes’ win over Notre Dame in Week 1. It was an issue to many because the College Football Playoff committee waited until over a week after Miami and Notre Dame had played its last games of the season to move the Hurricanes over the Fighting Irish.

    Had the committee moved Miami ahead of Notre Dame before the final week of the regular season, Miami’s inclusion into the playoff would have been far, far less of a talking point.

    And the Hurricanes responded to that discussion by reeling off three straight wins. Miami took down Texas A&M 10-3 in the first round before beating defending national champion Ohio State by the score of 24-14 in the Cotton Bowl.

    Beck will get the chance to start a national title game

    Beck came to Miami after the 2024 season and a two-year run as Georgia’s starting quarterback. The class of 2020 recruit got an extra season of eligibility thanks to the NCAA’s COVID-19 rules during his freshman season and redshirted in 2021. After serving as Stetson Bennett’s backup in 2022, Beck took over as Georgia’s starter in 2023 and was a preseason Heisman favorite entering the 2024 season.

    Advertisement

    His 2024 campaign was rougher than his first season as a starter. Beck completed a far smaller percentage of his passes and his interceptions doubled from six to 12. And he injured his right throwing elbow on a Hail Mary attempt at the end of the first half of the SEC title game.

    That injury cost him the rest of the season and he entered the transfer portal as Gunner Stockton started Georgia’s College Football Playoff loss to Notre Dame.

    Despite being unable to throw during spring practice, Miami gave him a significant NIL deal to replace 2025 No. 1 NFL Draft pick Cam Ward at quarterback. While Beck hasn’t matched Ward’s stats in 2025, he’s been plenty good enough to get the Hurricanes to their first title game in more than 20 seasons.

    Ole Miss’ dream title run ends in Arizona

    A Rebels win would have made Lane Kiffin’s decision to go to LSU look especially foolish in the short term. Kiffin left Ole Miss at the end of the regular season to go to a school that ostensibly offered him a greater chance to win a national title. But as Kiffin was recruiting players for a team that lost to Houston in the Texas Bowl, new Ole Miss coach Pete Golding won two playoff games to get the Rebels within a win of playing for the school’s first national title since 1960.

    Advertisement

    And boy, did Ole Miss almost get there.

    Ole Miss averaged 6.6 yards per play to Miami’s 5.2 but the Rebels ran 28 fewer plays than the Hurricanes. Miami snapped the ball 88 times on Thursday night and held the ball for over 41 minutes.

    And it wasn’t like Ole Miss turned the ball over a lot, either. The Rebels didn’t have a single turnover. Instead, Ole Miss was just 2-of-10 on third downs and was forced to throw the ball 39 times to just 21 run plays thanks to Kewan Lacy’s hamstring injury.

    The Rebels’ star tailback appeared to injure his right hamstring on a 73-yard TD run at the start of the second quarter. He didn’t return to the game for the rest of the first half and was a decoy for much of the second half as he had a compression sleeve on his right leg.

    Advertisement

    At one point, Ole Miss had Chambliss throw 19 straight passes as Lacy was no more than window dressing for the Miami defense. Lacy finished with 11 carries for 103 yards while Chambliss was 23-of-37 passing for 277 yards and that TD to Wright.

    Live coverage is over65 updates
    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      Trinidad Chambliss’ Hail Mary attempt falls incomplete and the Hurricanes will be playing for a national championship in Miami!

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      In the national title game, the Hurricanes will face the winner of Friday’s matchup between Oregon and Indiana.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      That will be the question looming over the next few weeks for the Rebels.

      QB Trinidad Chambliss is seeking another year of eligibility to play one more year at Ole Miss, but the NCAA has yet to rule on it.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      Pete Golding, who stepped into the head coach role after Lane Kiffin’s departure, talked about what he’ll remember from the most successful Ole Miss season in decades.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      Former Miami great Michael Irvin has been a star in these playoffs. His reaction to Miami’s winning touchdown did not disappoint.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      Under the ACC’s new revenue distribution system, Miami gets to keep the entire $20 million conference payout for reaching the CFP title game.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Miami receiver leapt into the crowd and took a selfie with fans after the big win.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Miami QB is loving life after leading his Canes to the championship game:

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Hurricanes till play in next week’s national title game at their home stadium, Hard Rock Stadium, in South Florida.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      “Whoever counted us out, they’re never part of the equation. They never will be.”

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      From Ross Dellenger, on the ground in Glendale:

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      There was plenty of hand-fighting in the end zone that’ll be talked about for days.

      “We have what we call mutual combat. Both players are getting their hands on each other. We’re going to leave that alone 99% of the time. I want to see one of them get a true, true advantage.” – Bill LeMonnier, ESPN rules analyst

      Here’s a close look at the Hail Mary battle in the end zone:

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Rebels aren’t done yet. They’ve worked their way down to the Miami 35-yard line and will have a shot at the end zone.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      TOUCHDOWN CARSON BECK!

      The Canes QB scrambled out of the pocket and had a wide-open lane on the left side for a 3-yard TD.

      Miami 31, Ole Miss 27 | 18 seconds left

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      Carson Beck just found Keelan Marion over the middle for a 17-yarder completion and the Canes are close to the end zone now.

      There’s just over 30 seconds left.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Canes are on the edge of field goal range with less than 2 minutes left after a facemask penalty on Ole Miss.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      We’re in the final 2 minutes of the Fiesta Bowl and the Hurricanes are facing a third-and-8 at their own 39-yard line.

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Rebels have retaken the lead on a 24-yard pass from Trinidad Chambliss to Dae’Quan Wright. Wright was wide open on a corner route and Ole Miss took full advantage.

      The two-point conversion is good and we have a game in Glendale!

      Ole Miss 27, Miami 24

    • Yahoo Sports Staff

      The Rebels are nearing the red zone after a controversial pass interference call and a 19-yard scramble by Trinidad Chambliss.

      There’s just over 3 minutes left in the game.

  • From ‘broken human being’ to Hurricanes hero, Carson Beck has Miami 1 win from immortality

    GLENDALE, Ariz. — Just off the University of Miami’s campus, there’s a bar somewhat hidden from the bustle of this city.

    The Sunset Tavern is where locals go, tucked behind a pizza joint at the intersection of Highway 1 and 58th Street, and then you must walk down a dark alley to this dive bar, strung with Christmas lights and featuring, usually, a live band. During Carson Beck’s first week in Miami last January, after his stunning transfer from Georgia, the quarterback and the school’s executive director and ace recruiter, Dennis Smith, sneaked away for a chat about life.

    Advertisement

    “Carson Beck was as broken of a human being I’ve seen,” Smith recalls on Thursday night from this Phoenix suburb in the wake of Miami’s 31-27 semifinal playoff win over Ole Miss. “He didn’t want to go back to college. Had no choice. People ran him out. Confidence problems. Very angry at the world.”

    Smith pauses to catch his breath. He composes himself and gestures toward a confetti-strewn celebration with Beck, of all people, at its center — the MVP of the Fiesta Bowl, the hero helping resurrect The U, the guy so many love to hate.

    “Here he is,” an emotional Smith says, “a product of a kid who kept running the marathon.”

    Carson Beck ran right into the end zone here on Thursday, right into history, into lore and legend status. In the stat sheet, it will only show a 3-yard run on second-and-goal with 18 seconds left.

    GLENDALE, ARIZONA - JANUARY 08: Carson Beck #11 of the Miami Hurricanes celebrates a touchdown against the Ole Miss Rebels in the fourth quarter during the 2025 College Football Playoff Semifinal at the VRBO Fiesta Bowl at State Farm Stadium on January 08, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. The Hurricanes defeated the Rebels 31-27. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

    Miami’s Carson Beck threw for 268 yards and 2 TDs, but his legs won the game for the Hurricanes on Thursday. (Christian Petersen/Getty Images)

    (Christian Petersen via Getty Images)

    But it meant so much more, right? On his scrambling, game-winning touchdown, Beck toted across the goal line anger and frustration building now for more than a year, releasing it all in a rocking celebration as Hurricanes fans erupted in a fitting display of a glorious return.

    Advertisement

    This is their resurrection moment.

    The U is back.

    After more than two decades in squalor, perhaps the industry’s most colorful and richest brand, the goliath of South Florida, the so-called Convicts themselves, with their gold chains and Starter jackets, their throwback pants and snazzy fedoras, The U is back.

    “I knew the Hurricanes would eventually get there. If I said we’d be here in January 2026, I’d be lying, but things come together,” says Dan Radakovich, the Miami athletic director who took over four years ago simultaneously with the arrival of the school’s prodigal son, coach Mario Cristobal.

    Advertisement

    “We did it in 1983, ‘87 and ‘91, winning national championships at home,” he continued. “Let’s see if we can do it again.”

    Hard Rock Stadium, here come your Canes.

    “We haven’t been home for a long time,” said Cristobal, a Cuban-blooded former Miami player and native of the city. “We’ve been on the road five straight games.”

    Cristobal burst out of the postgame locker room, embraced players as they left the field and then smiled at nearby reporters, quipping aloud, “My head is f***** spinning! I’m ready to go watch the tape. We should have scored 10 more points!”

    What a story this is.

    The 10th-seed team in the 12-team playoff — the last at-large selection into the field — is playing for it all. It’s four years in the making.

    Advertisement

    A head coach in December of 2021 who returned to his home to be with his ailing mother only to watch her pass in front of his eyes. A quarterback who last January left one powerhouse in Athens, Georgia — a place of pain for him — to find new hope on South Beach.

    An electrifying freshman, perhaps the best rookie in college football, receiver Malachi Toney and his celebrated nickname: Baby Jesus.

    God, was he good.

    And don’t forget arguably the best defensive front combination in the sport this year, Rueben Bain Jr. and Akheem Mesidor, athletic freaks who did enough to slow the Rebels (13-2) and end their storybook tale.

    Advertisement

    But on this night, in this game, within State Farm Stadium, one person stole the show.

    “Carson F****** Beck!” yelled a Miami staff member as Beck, teary-eyed and almost numb with excitement, stared longingly into the stands here.

    Is this real?

    After all, he left Georgia in a shocking move last winter, signing a $4 million contract with the Hurricanes — believed to be one of the largest monetary figures for a player in the sport at the time. He endured a public breakup with his girlfriend. He missed spring practice, unable to throw for four months as a shoulder injury healed.

    “When we got Carson Beck, everybody is like, ‘Why are you getting him?!’” Smith recalls. “I still had people this week — THIS WEEK! — questioning Carson Beck!”

    Advertisement

    Beck was down. But out? No way.

    “It’s been unbelievable,” Beck said. “Almost exactly a year ago I made a decision to come to this university. I was sitting in Jacksonville in my house in my room talking to Coach Cristobal and we were talking and we said,  ‘Let’s get to work.’ I believed in this vision.

    “It’s never easy. Lots of ups and downs. We showed that we don’t fake it. This team is real. We banded together and believed in each other.”

    GLENDALE, ARIZONA - JANUARY 08: Carson Beck #11 of the Miami Hurricanes reacts after the game against the Ole Miss Rebels during the 2025 College Football Playoff Semifinal at the VRBO Fiesta Bowl at State Farm Stadium on January 08, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. The Hurricanes defeated the Rebels 31-27. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images)

    Miami QB Carson Beck was named the MVP of the Fiesta Bowl after the Hurricanes’ win over Ole Miss. (Norm Hall/Getty Images)

    (Norm Hall via Getty Images)

    So many wrote these guys off after their second loss on Nov. 1 at SMU.

    No way they can do it now. Another disappointing season in Cristobal’s fourth year. Millions of NIL-related payments to some of the country’s most talented players wasted.

    Advertisement

    “We knew what it took to get to this point,” said Cristobal, whose team moved to 13-2. “They weren’t settling for just getting to this point. Narratives take over social media but this game has never been about that. These guys proved that Nov. 1 — 69 days ago — they would bring energy every single day.”

    This one felt extra special, delivering a knockout punch to the big bad SEC, now absent from a national championship game for a third consecutive year. With both conference commissioners watching from the field — Greg Sankey of the SEC and the ACC’s Jim Phillips — the ACC struck a victory over their southern rival league.

    In fact, Miami’s road here featured some high hurdles: a win in one of the country’s most difficult settings at No. 7 seed Texas A&M; beating defending national champion and second-seeded Ohio State in Dallas; and then ending the Ole Miss Rebels’ magical season with coach Lane Kiffin in Baton Rouge.

    “I always believed Miami deserved to be in the playoff,” said Phillips, the ACC commissioner. “[The ACC] is 9-4 in the bowl season and 7-2 against Power Four teams. I think Miami has had the most challenging path.”

    Advertisement

    With them the entire way was Beck, a seasoned play-caller who in the most critical moments of the game-winning drive salvaged this unpredictable postseason march.

    Down three points with 3:13 left, Beck and the Hurricanes sliced down the field on a 15-play, 75-yard haul of a drive. Running back Mark Fletcher, overshadowed on this team of stars despite his 133-yard night, gained four yards to convert a third down. Beck found a lunging CJ Daniels on a dig route to convert a third-and-6 by a single yard. Then, down the center of the field with 59 seconds left and on third-and-10, the quarterback hit Keelan Marion in stride for, perhaps, the biggest of his 268 yards passing. He found Marion again with 37 ticks left to set the stage for the grand finale.

    On second-and-goal from the 3-yard line, and within tying field-goal range, Cristobal and Miami offensive coordinator Shannon Dawson decided to go for the win since they had one remaining timeout. They called a pass play.

    Beck was supposed to dump the ball to Toney, running a short route at the goal line. But Ole Miss defensive backs covered the play. Beck ran right, wheeled around to escape a would-be sack and then darted left.

    Advertisement

    In front of him, he saw nothing. No defender. Just grass.

    “He saw an opening. The Grand Canyon is up the road,” Radakovich says laughing, “but for him, it was right here!”

    For the last month, Dawson has told Beck to run more on scrambles.

    “Finally,” Dawson chuckled, “he did it.” In fact, Beck had scrambles of 8 yards to convert a third down in the third quarter and another for 11.

    “That’s the man with the plan,” Marion said, gesturing to Beck. “Everybody spoke down on that kid and spoke bad on him, that he was this and that and he proved everything wrong. He never came to the media and said nothing. He proved everybody wrong game by game. Say what you want about it. We know who he is.”

    Advertisement

    A winner. The MVP. The star of the 2025 Miami Hurricanes.

    “He deserves this,” Dawson says. “He deserves this moment. Been a lot of people doubting him. I don’t think he gets the credit or respect that he deserves.”

    Dawson fumbled around for more words afterward when realizing that there will be no jet needed for the trip to the championship game.

    Miami is coming home.

    “I don’t know if I can put that into words,” Dawson says. “We get to play for a national championship at home. It’s surreal. Goddang!”

    Is The U Back?

    Said a smiling Beck: “It sure seems like it.”

  • Ravens OC Todd Monken says he ‘didn’t coach Lamar [Jackson] well enough’

    Baltimore Ravens offensive coordinator Todd Monken pointed the finger at himself as to why quarterback Lamar Jackson had a statistical decline this season, resulting in the team missing out on the playoffs for the first time since the 2021 season.

    “I didn’t coach Lamar well enough,” Monken told Ryan Ripken this week. “I didn’t have as good of a relationship as I could have. I didn’t do the things we needed to do this year to win enough games to give ourselves a chance. I believe that. … I’m going to fight like hell for the next job I get and I’m going to root like hell for the Ravens.”

    The Ravens finished 8-9 in the AFC North and a big part of the down season was Jackson taking a step back as he dealt with injuries that limited him to 13 games. Jackson threw for 49.3 fewer yards per game (196.1) this season compared to 2024; threw 20 fewer touchdown passes; and completed fewer than 200 passes for the first time since his rookie season in 2018.

    Advertisement

    [Get more Ravens news: Baltimore team feed]

    “I really wish Lamar would have been healthy and seen what we kept building on,” Monken said. “Where we went from ’23 to ’24, and then we just never got it going. That’s what you have to live with.”

    The 29-year-old Jackson had his best passing season in 2024, throwing for 4,172 yards and 41 touchdowns, while also running for 915 yards and four touchdowns. The Ravens, who finished first in overall offense with 424.9 yards per game last season, won their second straight division title before falling in the AFC Divisional Round to the Buffalo Bills.

    With head coach John Harbaugh now gone, a report in The Athletic detailed the relationship between Harbaugh, Monken and Jackson as having “grown awkward” and Harbaugh having to serve as a “buffer” between Monken and Jackson, two personalities that didn’t “mesh.”

    Advertisement

    Monken didn’t see it that way.

    “Lamar and I, to me, had a good relationship,” Monken said. “Could it have been better? Of course. Lamar and I never had an issue. I don’t know where that comes from. I never saw Lamar and Coach Harbaugh not have a great relationship. I never saw that.

    “I never saw Coach Harbaugh and any of our players not have a great relationship. Never. Not one time. So, any of that would be news to me, but I don’t know how people feel.”

    As of Friday, Monken remains the Ravens’ offensive coordinator, but he’s likely to move on following Harbaugh’s departure. The Cleveland Browns have reportedly requested to interview him for their open head coaching job.

  • College Football Playoff odds, picks: Our best bets for Oregon-Indiana

    The 12-team College Football Playoff is has one team already in the final (Miami) and two teams playing on Friday night for the right to face the Hurricanes.

    The first semifinal game saw Miami (FL) hold on for a thrilling 31-27 win over Ole Miss, as Carson Beck ran in a touchdown with 18 seconds remaining only to see Rebels QB Trinidad Chambliss lead Ole Miss past midfield and a final Hail Mary throw fall incomplete.

    Advertisement

    Our college football handicapping duo of Corbie Craig and Ed Feng provide a best bet on tonight’s Indiana-Oregon matchup.

    Odds courtesy of BetMGM. This file will be updated.

    Craig: Off impressive wins, Indiana–Oregon is being billed as a heavyweight matchup, but a deeper look shows a clear flaw on the Ducks’ side: field position.

    Oregon consistently strung together long drives, yet rarely flipped them into real scoring chances. Their average scoring drive traveled just 24 yards, showing how dependent the offense was on short fields rather than sustained efficiency. When forced to go the length of the field, the Ducks struggled.

    Advertisement

    Indiana is well-equipped to exploit that. The Hoosiers can extend drives offensively, and when stalled, their Australian punter Mitch McCarthy regularly flips the field — limiting returns and pinning opponents inside the 20. That pressure compounds against an Oregon offense that already leaned on short fields to score.

    With Indiana’s interior defensive push likely forcing quick throws and limiting explosives, Oregon may again find itself needing long, mistake-free marches to score — something we didn’t see the Ducks accomplish against Texas Tech.

    Bet: Oregon team total under 21.5 (-119)

    Feng: Indiana is an elite team rightfully favored to win a national championship. The Hoosiers already have a 30-20 win at Oregon this season, a game in which they had to overcome a pick 6 by QB Fernando Mendoza. In that prior game, QB Dante Moore had a poor performance, with a 27.5% passing success rate and 3.78 yards per pass attempt (40.7%, 6.37 averages). Moore is a much better QB than that.

    Advertisement

    Oregon is a championship-caliber team as well, and ranks 10th on offense and fifth on defense in my adjusted yards per play metric. They have the talent and coaching to win this game outright. My member model favors Indiana by 1.4 points. As much as I hate to go against Curt Cignetti, the spread is too high in this game.

    Lean: Oregon +4 or better

  • Trae Young sends Hawks farewell after trade to Wizards: ‘It’s time to see what’s possible when the support is real’

    Trae Young’s time with the Atlanta Hawks is officially over. The Hawks and Washington Wizards announced Young’s trade shortly after the star guard posted a farewell to Atlanta.

    “I’m walking into this next chapter with my head high and my eyes forward,” Young wrote on social media. “It’s time to see what’s possible when the support is real and the vision is clear. We move.”

    In exchange for Young, the Hawks receive C.J. McCollum and Corey Kispert, with no draft picks in either direction. Young is in his eighth season and had spent his entire career with the Hawks before being moved.

    Advertisement

    The deal was executed during a Hawks home game, while Young was on the team’s bench in street clothes. He quickly exited the court after receiving some last-second well wishes from teammates.

    News of the trade came two days after veteran NBA reporter Marc Stein reported the Wizards were looming as a top destination for Young. Young and his agents worked with the Hawks on the trade.

    After playing in the first five games of the 2025-26 NBA season, Young missed the next 23 games with an MCL sprain. The Hawks went 13–10 without him, though he returned in mid-December. The 27-year-old dropped eight points and had 10 assists in his first game back, but has missed several games this month due to a right quad contusion.

    Advertisement

    The change of scenery for Young allows the Hawks to build around the core of Jalen Johnson, Dyson Daniels, Onyeka Okongwu and Nickeil Alexander-Walker, who are all signed through at least the 2027–28 season.

    Young was not extended this offseason and is in his fourth year of a five-year, $215 million deal with the Hawks. He was eligible for a four-year extension, but Atlanta didn’t make him a long-term offer. He is making $46 million this season with a player option for $49 million next season.

    [Subscribe to Yahoo Sports NBA on YouTube]

    The Hawks last made the playoffs in 2023, when they lost in the first round to the Boston Celtics.

    Advertisement

    The Wizards have a new star in Trae Young. Can they succeed where the Hawks didn’t?

    Without context, this is an odd deal. Young led the NBA in assists per game last season and was basically salary-dumped. The Hawks got back two players whose main appeal was making the trade work. An actual NBA All-Star in his 20s requested a trade to the Wizards.

    All of that reflects how much the Young era seemed to run its course in Atlanta. Yes, few players in the NBA combine scoring and facilitating like Young, but his limitations have only become more evident with time, and his offensive value never made the Hawks an actual playoff threat outside of a fluky Eastern Conference finals run in 2021.

    This season, Atlanta is 2-8 in games with Young and 15-13 in games without him, leaning instead on players like Johnson and Daniels. And with McCollum and Kristaps Porzingis, the Hawks have two large expiring deals that will let them be aggressive in free agency.

    Advertisement

    So the Hawks opted to move on with what’s been working and get out of Young’s contract. The Wizards didn’t mind the discount price, but what happens next depends on Young. The 27-year-old guard has the $49 million player option for next season and could theoretically hit free agency this summer, but the fact the Wizards were his preferred destination makes a longer-term deal feel likely.

    At 10-26, the Wizards have the second-worst record in the Eastern Conference. They have some interesting talent for Young to work alongside in the short term, and also a significant amount of cap space and draft capital this offseason. The team hasn’t had an All-Star since Bradley Beal in 2021 and will be hoping Young can fill that void.

    That will likely happen once Young is healthy. The bigger question is what can they do with him.