Tag: Fox Sport News

  • Baylor coach Scott Drew responds to Tom Izzo, other criticism after James Nnaji signing: ‘We don’t make the rules’

    Scott Drew doesn’t think he has done anything wrong after signing former NBA Draft pick James Nnaji earlier this month.

    The Baylor head coach said on Sunday that, despite a wave of criticism from throughout the sport, he’s just adapting to the current state of college basketball. He isn’t making the rules, so he’s going to do what he can with them before they are changed in the future.

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    “Early on, when it first came out with G League players, I wasn’t in favor of that either,” Drew said, via ESPN. “But again, we don’t make the rules and as we find out about things, we’re always going to adapt to put our program in the best position to be successful, because that’s what we get paid to do.”

    Tom Izzo, others call out Scott Drew

    Baylor announced on Christmas Eve that it had signed Nnaji, who was selected by the Detroit Pistons with the No. 31 overall pick in the 2023 NBA Draft. Nnaji still has never played in an NBA game. He had his rights traded to the Charlotte Hornets and then the New York Knicks, and he’s been with FC Barcelona since 2020.

    Nnaji is now the first former NBA Draft pick to be cleared to play at the college level. Two other G League players — Thierry Darlan and London Johnson — are set to play at Santa Clara and Louisville, respectively, next season.

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    Naturally, the announcement drew some pretty strong backlash. UConn coach Dan Hurley posted about it on social media, calling it “crazy,” and Gonzaga coach Mark Few addressed it on Sunday, too.

    “It’s wild out there right now,” Few said. “We really don’t have any organizational or any real rules right now. I think guys are just trying to do whatever they can. Until there’s a rule that says you can’t do it, it’s hard to blame anybody for doing what they’re doing. Our lack of leadership has really shown.”

    Longtime Michigan State coach Tom Izzo called both Drew and the NCAA out over the issue on Saturday, too.

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    “I’m a little surprised,” Izzo said. “I’ve got a call in to Scott. I’m anxious to see what he tells me. Not saying that we’re holier than thou or anybody should not do this or that, but if we’re dipping into that one, if it’s like I’m reading or hearing … and now we’re taking guys that were drafted in the NBA and everything … If that’s what we’re gonna do, shame on the NCAA. Shame on the coaches, too. But shame on the NCAA. Because coaches are going to do what they’ve got to do, I guess.”

    Drew, who has been leading Baylor since 2003 and led them to a national championship in 2021, said he spoke with Izzo on Sunday night.

    “Coach Izzo and I are friends. I’ve got a lot of respect for him. Great conversation,” Drew said. “As he said, most coaches are 99% aligned on things that we would like to see done with our game. At the same time, from my knowledge, until we get to collective bargaining, I don’t think we can come up with rules that are agreeable or enforceable. Until that, I think all of us have got to be ready to adjust and adapt to what’s out there.”

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    The NCAA addressed the issue in a statement to The Field of 68’s Jeff Goodman, and pushed blame to Congress. The governing body has not granted any eligibility to applicants that have played in any NBA regular season games, either.

    “Schools are recruiting and seeking eligibility for more individuals with more international, semi-pro and professional experience than ever before, and while the NCAA members ahve updated many rules following the House injunction, more rules must likely be updated to reflect the choices member schools are making,” the NCAA said. “At the same time, NCAA eligibility rules have been invalidated by judges across the country wreaking havoc on the system and leading to fewer opportunities for high school students, which is why the Association is asking Congress to intervene in these challenges.”

    So, when will Nnaji make his debut?

    It’s unclear when Nnaji will actually get to make his debut with the Bears, who sit at 10-2 on the season after beating Arlington Baptist 124-61 on Monday. They’ll kick off Big 12 play on Saturday with TCU, and then will host No. 3 Iowa State next week.

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    The 7-footer arrived in Waco, Texas, for the first time on Sunday night, and he was set to undergo his physical on Monday. Once he gets out there, the 21-year-old should be able to provide better depth for the Bears inside after they lost both Juslin Bodo Bodo and JJ White to injury.

    “As soon as we get him all cleared, he’s got to learn offensively, defensively,” Drew said. “He can’t play until he knows what he’s doing out there. … How quick, depends on how fast he picks up things. It’ll be great having an eight-man rotation at some point.”

  • Dennis Hamlin, father of NASCAR driver Denny Hamlin, dies from injuries sustained in house fire

    Dennis Hamlin, the father of NASCAR Cup Series driver Denny Hamlin, has died, and Hamlin’s mother, Mary Lou, was severely injured in a fire at their home on Sunday night.

    Fire crews responded to a call at 6:19 p.m. ET in Stanley, North Carolina. According to multiple reports, both Dennis and Mary Lou were outside the residence when firefighters arrived, and they were taken to a hospital. Numerous fire departments were involved in putting out the blaze because there are no hydrants in the area where the Hamlins lived.

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    Gaston County Emergency Medical Services confirmed Monday evening that Dennis Hamlin had died from injuries sustained in the fire and that Mary Lou was being actively treated at a hospital in Winston-Salem.

    Per the Athletic, a statement from Gaston EMS said that both Hamlins suffered “catastrophic injuries” in the fire.

    The house is owned by a real estate company managed by Denny Hamlin.

    Dennis Hamlin had been in poor health in the fall of 2025. After winning at Las Vegas Motor Speedway to clinch a chance at the championship, Denny Hamlin was emotional and reflected on the sacrifices his family made for him to pursue his auto racing career.

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    “Just thank him for sacrificing really his and my mom’s life to chase around my dreams,” Hamlin said when asked after the race what he wanted to say to his dad following the victory. “My parents had no money. My parents had very normal jobs, but they found a way. That way is a path I would never recommend anybody taking. Every credit card that comes to the mail, ‘OK, we’ll use it.’ Asking people to help. Second and third mortgaging the house. All these things. The arguments I had to listen to. I’m in my room, and my mom and dad are going at it. One is saying, ‘I can’t do this anymore.’ The other one saying, ‘Please just one more week.’”

    Before the title race at Phoenix, Hamlin said he knew it was his dad’s last opportunity to see him win the championship.

    “I know for a fact this is my last chance for my dad to see it,” Hamlin told the AP in October. “I don’t want him going and never getting to see the moment.”

    Hamlin, 45, controlled the race at Phoenix and was well on his way to victory. However, a tire failure from fellow title contender William Byron set up a late caution, and Hamlin exited pit road behind eventual Cup Series champion Kyle Larson because of the teams’ differing pit strategies. Then Hamlin was unable to pass Larson in the final two laps of the race, and Larson won his second Cup Series title.

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    Weeks after the title race, Hamlin scored a major victory in a federal courthouse in North Carolina, as the 23XI Racing team he co-owns with Michael Jordan and Front Row Motorsports settled their anti-trust lawsuit against NASCAR. As a result of the settlement, NASCAR granted permanent charters to all Cup Series teams. The lack of permanent charters was a driving reason for the suit.

  • 49ers & Seahawks set for 1-seed battle + Did the Steelers lose focus vs. Myles Garrett?

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    How far can Brock Purdy take the banged-up San Francisco 49ers? Yahoo Sports’ Andrew Siciliano, Charles Robinson and Frank Schwab recap that thrilling SNF shootout and dive into key winner-take-all battles in the AFC North and NFC South. Will the Pittsburgh Steelers or Baltimore Ravens come out on top of the division? Is it fair that the struggling Tampa Bay Buccaneers or hot-and-cold Carolina Panthers will host a playoff game? Closing things out, the crew looks at the most disappointing teams that missed the playoffs before discussing their “One More Thing.”

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    (6:20) – 49ers win shootout over Bears

    (19:40) – Browns upset Steelers

    (40:40) – Bucs & Panthers fight to win abysmal NFC South

    (49:30) – Which playoffs miss is most disappointing?

    (1:02:25) – One More Thing

    Can Brock Purdy and the San Francisco 49ers succeed in the playoffs? (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

    Can Brock Purdy and the San Francisco 49ers succeed in the playoffs? (Photo by Ezra Shaw/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

  • Nuggets star Nikola Jokić limps off early in loss to Heat after knee injury

    Denver Nuggets star Nikola Jokić left the team’s 147-123 loss to the Miami Heat early on Monday night with a left knee injury.

    Jokić stepped awkwardly and his left knee buckled while standing in the paint in the final seconds of the first half at the Kesaya Center on Monday. Teammate Spencer Jones stepped back on Jokić’s foot as he was trying to guard Jaime Jaquez Jr., and that’s when Jokić’s knee buckled.

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    He instantly fell to the ground after the bad step and started rolling around in pain while grabbing his left knee as Kel’el Ware made an easy layup, which tied the game at the break. Jokić eventually stood up and walked to the locker room on his own, but he was limping significantly and barely put any weight on his left leg as he did so.

    Jokić did not start the game in the second half, and the team initially said he was questionable to return with a left knee injury. He did not return. He is expected to undergo testing on his knee Tuesday. Further specifics of his injury are not yet known.

    “Anybody that gets hurt in this game, it’s kind of gut-wrenching, especially somebody as special as he is,” Nuggets coach David Adelman said. “So we, we’ll find out more tomorrow and we’ll move on as a team.”

    Jokić finished the night with 21 points, eight assists and five rebounds. He shot 9-of-14 from the field in the first half, too. The three-time league MVP entered the contest averaging 29.2 points per game while leading the league with both 12.4 rebounds and 11.1 assists per contest.

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    Without Jokić around, the Heat took off in the second half to grab the easy 24-point win. They jumped up by 11 points after the third quarter, and then opened the final period on a 32-17 run. Their 147 points marked the most they’ve scored in a game this season.

    Norman Powell led the Heat with 25 points, and Nikola Jovic added 22 points off the bench after shooting 5-of-8 from behind the arc. Jaquez finished with 20 points and 11 assists. The Heat shot 54% from the field and made 22 3-pointers. The win was their third straight, and got them to 18-15 this season.

    Jamal Murray had 20 points and 11 assists for the Nuggets. Both Jones and Tim Hardaway added 16 points each, too. The Nuggets have now lost four of their last six games and fell to 22-10 on the season. The game marked the second of a seven-game road trip.

  • NFL Week 18 schedule: Steelers and Ravens will wrap up regular season with AFC North, playoff spot on the line

    It all comes down to this.

    The NFL released the schedule for Week 18 of the regular season on Sunday night, and there will be at least one matchup next week that determines a playoff spots.

    The first key game in Week 18 will feature the Carolina Panthers and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who both fell last week to set up the NFC South battle. The winner of that game — which will take place at 4:30 p.m. ET on Saturday — will end up in the playoffs as the No. 4 seed in the NFC. This, however, is assuming that the Atlanta Falcons don’t beat the New Orleans Saints in their final game. If the Falcons pull that off, thanks to their win over the Los Angeles Rams on Monday night, the division will belong to the Panthers regardless via a potential three-way tiebreaker.

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    Then, the final game of the regular season, Game 272, will take place in Pittsburgh. The Steelers fell to the Cleveland Browns on Sunday afternoon after the Baltimore Ravens’ win over the Green Bay Packers on Saturday night. The two AFC North rivals will now compete for the title at Acrisure Stadium on “Sunday Night Football” to end the regular season.

    Here’s everything you need to know for Week 18 of the 2025 NFL season:

    Saturday, January 3

    All times ET

    Carolina Panthers at Tampa Bay Buccaneers

    Time: 4:30 p.m.
    Location: Raymond James Stadium | Tampa, Florida
    TV: ABC/ESPN

    Seattle Seahawks at San Francisco 49ers

    Time: 8 p.m.
    Location: Levi’s Stadium | Santa Clara, California
    TV: ABC/ESPN

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    Sunday, January 4

    All times ET

    Green Bay Packers at Minnesota Vikings

    Time: 1 p.m.
    Location: US Bank Stadium | Minneapolis, Minnesota
    TV: CBS

    Cleveland Browns at Cincinnati Bengals

    Time: 1 p.m.
    Location: Paycor Stadium | Cincinnati, Ohio
    TV: CBS

    Indianapolis Colts at Houston Texans

    Time: 1 p.m.
    Location: NRG Stadium | Houston, Texans
    TV: CBS

    Dallas Cowboys at New York Giants

    Time: 1 p.m.
    Location: MetLife Stadium | East Rutherford, New Jersey
    TV: Fox

    New Orleans Saints at Atlanta Falcons

    Time: 1 p.m.
    Location: Mercedes-Benz Stadium | Atlanta, Georgia
    TV: Fox

    Tennessee Titans at Jacksonville Jaguars

    Time: 1 p.m.
    Location: EverBank Stadium | Jacksonville, Florida
    TV: Fox

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    Los Angeles Chargers at Denver Broncos

    Time: 4:25 p.m.
    Location: Empower Field at Mile High | Denver, Colorado
    TV: CBS

    Kansas City Chiefs at Las Vegas Raiders

    Time: 4:25 p.m.
    Location: Allegiant Stadium | Las Vegas, Nevada
    TV: CBS

    Washington Commanders at Philadelphia Eagles

    Time: 4:25 p.m.
    Location: Lincoln Financial Field | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
    TV: CBS

    New York Jets at Buffalo Bills

    Time: 4:25 p.m.
    Location: Highmark Stadium | Orchard Park, New York
    TV: CBS

    Detroit Lions at Chicago Bears

    Time: 4:25 p.m.
    Location: Soldier Field | Chicago, Illinois
    TV: Fox

    Arizona Cardinals at Los Angeles Rams

    Time: 4:25 p.m.
    Location: SoFi Stadium | Inglewood, California
    TV: Fox

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    Miami Dolphins at New England Patriots

    Time: 4:25 p.m.
    Location: Gillette Stadium | Foxborough, Massachusetts
    TV: Fox

    Baltimore Ravens at Pittsburgh Steelers

    Time: 8:20 p.m.
    Location: Acrisure Stadium | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
    TV: NBC

  • Falcons play spoiler to Matthew Stafford’s MVP and Bucs’ playoff hopes in thriller over Rams behind big game from Bijan Robinson

    The Atlanta Falcons entered Monday night at 6-9 with nothing to play for. They didn’t get that memo against the playoff-bound Los Angeles Rams.

    Atlanta jumped out to a 21-0 halftime lead and held off a second-half Rams rally for a thrilling 27-24 win. The Rams tied the game at 24-24 late in the fourth quarter. But the Falcons responded to set up a game-winning field-goal attempt by Zane Gonzalez. He was good from 51 yards to secure the win and stave off a Falcons collapse.

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    Late no-call helps secure Falcons’ win

    The Rams missed on three deep shots to get into field-goal range in the game’s final 21 seconds. On the second attempt to wide receiver Tutu Atwell, officials missed a potential pass interference call that would have set up the Rams in chip-shot FG range. Cornerback Dee Alford had a hold of Atwell’s left arm, but officials didn’t call pass interference, and the Falcons held on for the win.

    Bad night for Stafford’s MVP case

    The loss could help keep the playoff-bound Rams in the NFC’s No. 6 seed and block them from the No. 5 spot, which offers a tougher matchup in the wild-card round.

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    The No. 5 seed will travel to face the NFC South winner, which will either be the the Carolina Panthers or Tampa Bay Buccaneers. The No. 6 seed projects to travel to face either the Philadelphia Eagles or Chicago Bears. Seeding won’t be finalized until the dust settles on Week 18.

    Monday’s result also plays a significant factor in two late-season NFL storylines.

    The Falcons intercepted Matthew Stafford three times, including a pick 6, delivering a blow to his MVP hopes in what’s largely seen as a two-man race with Patriots quarterback Drake Maye. The pick 6 by Jessie Bates III spotted the Falcons a 14-0 lead in the first half.

    When the night was over, Stafford completed 22 of 38 passes for 269 yards with 2 touchdowns and 3 interceptions. And it increased his season-long interception total from five to eight.

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    One bad night, of course, isn’t going to tank Stafford’s MVP case. But on the heels of Maye’s five-touchdown effort in a blowout of the Jets on Sunday, the MVP race has gotten considerably tighter.

    Bucs’ playoff hopes take a hit

    The surprise Falcons win is also a threat to the playoff hopes of the Buccaneers. The Bucs play the Panthers on Saturday afternoon in a game that could determine the NFC South champion and the division’s only playoff berth.

    But if the Falcons win next Sunday’s game against the New Orleans Saints, Saturday’s Panthers-Bucs result won’t matter. The Panthers would secure the division in the event of a three-way tie with the Falcons and Bucs at 8-9 if Tampa Bay and Atlanta both win next week.

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    Big night from Bijan Robinson

    The Falcons built their big lead behind a huge first half from Robinson, who tallied 138 yards from scrimmage and two touchdowns before the break.

    Robinson finished the night with 22 carries for 195 yards and a touchdown on the ground. He added 5 catches for 34 yards and another score. He capped the first half with a 93-yard touchdown run that was set up by Stafford’s second interception and extended the Falcons’ lead to 21-0.

    It appeared to put the Falcons in complete control.

    Rams rally, but come up short

    But the game swung in the second half when Jared Verse blocked a Gonzalez field-goal attempt, then scooped the ball up and returned it 78 yards for a Rams touchdown. Instead of a 27-10 Falcons lead late in the third quarter with a made field goal, the Rams cut their deficit to 24-17.

    The Rams then tied the game at 24 on an 11-yard touchdown from Stafford to Puka Nacua with 2:46 remaining. They appeared to have the Falcons on the ropes.

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    But the Falcons maintained their composure and responded with a nine-play, 32-yard drive that set Gonzalez up for the game-winning attempt. Gonzalez was pure from 51 yards with 21 seconds remaining, and the Falcons fended off Los Angeles’ last-gasp effort to get into field-goal range to hold on for the win.

    Live coverage is over30 updates
    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      The Rams have already clinched a playoff spot, but they are now in the No. 6 seed with the loss. That’s likely where they’ll stay, too, unless they beat the Arizona Cardinals next week and get some help.

      The Falcons will wrap up the regular season against the New Orleans Saints next weekend. While they are out of the playoffs already, a win there would hand the NFC South to the Carolina Panthers.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      After nearly blowing their massive 21-0 lead, the Falcons have held on to grab a narrow win over the Rams thanks to Zane Gonzales’ 51-yard field goal in the final minute. Puka Nacua nearly had a WILD grab to put the Rams in field goal position, but he bobbled it on his way out of bounds.

      The Falcons, who have already been eliminated from the playoffs, have now won three straight.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      This one went off perfectly. Zane Gonzales just drilled a 51-yard field goal, and the Falcons are out in front with about 20 seconds left on the clock. That may win them the game.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      And just like that, we’re all tied up. Matthew Stafford threw it up to Puka Nacua on a screen pass, and he took it 11 yards for the touchdown.

      The Falcons will get the ball back now with 2:46 left with a chance to go win it.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      As far as a fourth-quarter interception goes, the Rams got lucky there. They came up with a quick three-and-out after the pick and the penalty, so they’ll get the ball back almost right away after a punt.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      That was such a promising drive for the Rams, too. Matthew Stafford tried to get it to Terrance Ferguson there on a short fourth down, but Xavier Watts jumped in front and pulled off the interception.

      Watts ran it all the way back to the end zone, but officials brought it back after he stepped out of bounds just barely. A Falcons coach cut off an official, too, which brought the play back another 15 yards.

    • Ryan Young

      Ryan Young

      The Rams are rolling now. They just forced a quick three-and-out there after breaking up a pass intended for Bijan Robinson there on third down, so the Rams will get the ball back right away in the four

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      This is how you get back into the game.

      The Falcons were on the verge of a 3-possession lead with a 37-yard field-goal attempt by Zane Gonzalez. Instead, the Rams have cut the Atlanta lead to seven.

      Jared Verse blocked Gonzalez’s attempt, then scooped the ball up and returned it 78 yards untouched for a touchdown. The 10-point swing has cut Atlanta’s lead to 24-17 late in the third quarter, and the tenor of this game has taken a dramatic shift.

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      This is what MVP-candidate Matthew Stafford looks like.

      Stafford rolled out on a play-action pass and threw a 27-yard laser to tight end Terrance Ferguson in the end zone for the first Rams touchdown of the night. Los Angeles cuts the Atlanta lead to 24-10 with 4:59 remaining in the third quarter. This one’s not over.

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      The Falcons answered with a 56-yard Zane Gonzalez field goal and have extended their lead back to 21 points at 24-21 with 7:46 remaining in the third quarter.

      The Rams need a touchdown, and fast.

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      The Rams are on the board, but they remain down by three possessions.

      Los Angeles went for it and converted on fourth-and-6 on its first possession of the the second half. But when they faced fourth-and-12 in field-goal range, they settled for a 35-yard Harrison Mevis kick.

      The Falcons hold a 21-3 lead early in the third quarter.

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      It’s all Falcons at halftime in a stunner against a playoff-bound Rams team.

      The Falcons have intercepted Matthew Stafford twice and take a 21-0 lead into the break. A 93-yard Bijan Robinson touchdown run capped off the explosive Atlanta first half.

      Falcons
      Kirk Cousins: 7 of 11, 68 yards, 1 TD, no turnovers
      Bijan Robinson: 11 carries, 125 yards; 2 catches, 13 yards; 2 total TDs
      Jessie Bates: 1 interception returned for TD

      Rams
      Matthew Stafford: 9 of 17, 96 yards, 0 TDs, 2 INTs including 1 pick 6
      Blake Corum: 6 carries for 18 yards
      Puka Nacua: 2 catches for 18 yards

      Falcons total offense: 211 yards on 7.5 yards per play, 8 first downs
      Rams total offense: 113 yards on 4 yards per play, 5 first downs

      Falcons turnovers: 0
      Rams turnovers: 2

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      What a stunner. The Falcons are taking a 21-0 lead into halftime while holding a Sean McVay-coached Rams team scoreless in the first half for just the third time in McVay’s 9-year stint.

      Two interceptions of Matthew Stafford and a 93-yard Bijan Robinson touchdown run highlight an electric first half for the Falcons

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      The Falcons have blown this thing open after Mathew Stafford’s second interception of the game

      Xavier Watts intercepted a Stafford deep ball on first down despite an offensive pass interference penalty on receiver Xavier Smith.

      One play later, Bijan Robinson took it to the house for a 93-yard touchdown run an 21-0 Atlanta lead.

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      A high-octane Rams offense has been anything put and remains off the scoreboard at the first-half 2-minute warning.

      They have the ball back near midfield after a Falcons punt and will look to run a successful 2-minute drill to cut into Atlanta’s 14-0 lead.

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      The Rams thought they were in the red zone when Puka Nacua made a sensational contested sideline catch inside the 5-yard line for a 36-yard gain.

      But left tackle D.J. Humphries wasn’t lined up on the line of scrimmage and got flagged for an illegal formation penalty that negated the big gain. The Rams punted 3 plays later and remain scoreless as the Falcons hold a 14-0 lead with 4:11 remaining in the first half.

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      The Falcons have nothing to play for but are competing tonight.

      Matthew Stafford missed the mark with an overthrow downfield, and All-Pro safety Jessie Bates picked it off downfield. Bates returned it 34 yards for a touchdown and 14-0 Falcons lead.

      The interception was just Stafford’s sixth of the season. It was the 32nd pick 6 of his 17-season career, tying him with Brett Favre for the most all time, according to the “Monday Night Football” broadcast.

      It won’t help his case as he looks to secure league MVP.

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      The Falcons ran 10 plays after forcing the turnover on downs in the red zone, but only advanced to their own 48-yard line. They punted on fourth-and-9, and the Rams have the ball back with a 7-0 deficit and 9:54 remaining in the second quarter.

    • Jason Owens

      Jason Owens

      Khalid Kareem was elevated from Atlanta’s practice squad for Monday’s game and immediately rewarded the Falcons for their decision.

      The sixth-year pro anticipated the snap on fourth-and-1 and stuffed Rams running back Kyren Williams in the backfield for a 2-yard loss.

      The Falcons take over on downs at their own 13 with a 7-0 lead after coming up with the stop in the red zone.

  • NFL Power Rankings entering Week 18: Why Kyle Shanahan is Coach of the Year

    AFC East: Buffalo Bills | Miami Dolphins | New England Patriots | New York Jets
    AFC North: Baltimore Ravens | Cincinnati Bengals | Cleveland Browns | Pittsburgh Steelers
    AFC South: Houston Texans | Indianapolis Colts | Jacksonville Jaguars | Tennessee Titans
    AFC West: Denver Broncos | Kansas City Chiefs | Las Vegas Raiders | Los Angeles Chargers

    NFC East: Dallas Cowboys | New York Giants | Philadelphia Eagles | Washington Commanders
    NFC North: Chicago Bears | Detroit Lions | Green Bay Packers | Minnesota Vikings
    NFC South: Atlanta Falcons | Carolina Panthers | New Orleans Saints | Tampa Bay Buccaneers
    NFC West: Arizona Cardinals | Los Angeles Rams | San Francisco 49ers | Seattle Seahawks

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    Kyle Shanahan has been the best head coach in the NFL. Strangely, that doesn’t often translate to NFL Coach of the Year.

    Shanahan is having a remarkable season. He has navigated injuries to Brock Purdy, George Kittle, Trent Williams, Brandon Aiyuk, Ricky Pearsall, Jauan Jennings, Nick Bosa and Fred Warner to put his team one win away from the No. 1 seed in the NFC. When you hear people gush about the 49ers’ offense, which averaged 42.3 points and 455.3 yards while punting only twice in December, remember that Shanahan is the driver of that success. He’s the best play caller in the game right now.

    Other teams have gone in the tank after injuries that were nowhere near what the 49ers have dealt with, while San Francisco is 12-4. It isn’t just the best coaching job this season, it’s the best coaching job in many seasons.

    That’s not usually how Coach of the Year is decided, strangely enough. The award typically goes to a coach who exceeds preseason expectations the most — like preseason predictions are never wrong — and it often goes to a first-year coach. Shanahan might be the best coach, but based on previous history it will go to someone who was a huge improvement over what Matt Eberflus or Jerod Mayo did last season. That’s just how the award is decided most seasons, and it’s unlikely to change. That’s why Vince Lombardi and Bill Walsh each won just one NFL Coach of the Year award. That’s as many as Jason Garrett, Brian Daboll and Matt Nagy and fewer than Ron Rivera or Kevin Stefanski, who have two each.

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    That shouldn’t bother Shanahan that much. He might not win NFL Coach of the Year, but he’ll just have to settle for being the NFL’s best coach — by a significant margin — this season.

    The Raiders have embarrassed themselves as a franchise over the past week, with the injured reserve shenanigans surrounding Brock Bowers and Maxx Crosby, then getting blown out by the Giants at home. Perhaps the ends justify the means, because they’re on their way to the first overall pick of the 2026 NFL Draft. But we learned a lot about the Raiders over the last week, and it wasn’t pretty.

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    The Jets have lost six of seven, and the losses have been by 13, 13, 24, 28, 23 and 32 points. Their -107 point differential in December is the worst in NFL history. Aaron Glenn wasn’t dealt a great hand in his first year as a head coach. The trades before the deadline obviously made the Jets weaker. Quarterback injuries really set the Jets back. But seeing them get blown out every week as the season nears its end has to bring up questions over whether Glenn was the right hire. He backtracked Monday on criticism he made of his team’s effort in Sunday’s blowout loss to the Patriots. Teams like the Dolphins, Saints, Giants and Titans had rough seasons but have all competed late in the year, at least in spurts. The Jets are showing absolutely nothing.

    Cam Ward’s passer rating before the Titans’ Week 10 bye was 72.1. Since the bye it is 89.2. He had five touchdowns and six interceptions before the bye, and 10 touchdowns and one interception since. There is real progress happening for the No. 1 pick of the 2025 NFL Draft. The Titans are still a bad team with a poor supporting cast around Ward, but seeing Ward making strides is huge, especially with a crucial coaching search upcoming.

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    The Michael Wilson phenomenon is strange. When Marvin Harrison Jr. missed games due to injury, Wilson took off. Despite having just 52 yards through five weeks, Wilson needs only 93 yards in the finale to reach 1,000 for the season. It’s a nice third-year breakout for Wilson. It also leads to questions about Harrison. He has two 100-yard games in his career, with none this season, while Wilson in the same offense has three in the past seven weeks and is averaging 96.6 yards per game. That might reflect well on Wilson, but it’s hard to not compare it to Harrison’s quiet first two seasons and wonder why Harrison hasn’t reached those marks.

    For all the Giants fans who are upset the team might have blown its shot at the first overall pick by beating the Raiders on Sunday, there is value in winning, especially for a young team. The Giants should feel better about themselves than the Raiders and whatever they’re trying to accomplish. If the Giants were desperate for a quarterback maybe Sunday’s win would be worse, but they’re not. Just enjoy the win. The draft will work itself out later; the Giants will still get a very good player.

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    Against the Cowboys, 2025 seventh-round draft pick Jacory Croskey-Merritt rushed for 105 yards and two touchdowns, and 2024 second-round pick Johnny Newton had three sacks. It came in yet another loss, but those are the breakout games the Commanders need to get late in the season. They have a surprisingly old roster and remaking it in the offseason won’t be easy. Having any young players to rely on for 2026 helps that process.

    Cleveland hasn’t had a great season, but a win over the Steelers to keep their rival from clinching the AFC North title is a great highlight. Its defense came up big, keeping Pittsburgh out of the end zone. There are some pieces to start building around, including a strong 2025 rookie class. The only remaining business for the finale is getting Myles Garrett one more sack. He is a half-sack short of the NFL single-season record after getting just a half of a sack over Cleveland’s past two games.

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    The Chiefs played hard and nearly beat the Broncos. It’s tough when your third-string quarterback gets just 66 yards in his first career start. The funniest thing in Week 18 might be the Chiefs playing so poorly again that the Raiders somehow beat them, screwing up Las Vegas’ plan to get the first pick in the 2026 NFL Draft and some hope at quarterback. It’s possible. The Chiefs won’t generate a lot of offense and they just need the season to finish. And they probably don’t want the Raiders getting their preferred quarterback. The only motivation to win might be to send Travis Kelce out the right way, if Sunday is in fact his final NFL game before he retires.

    The Saints seem to have gotten it right with the second-round pick of Tyler Shough. He deserves the late Offensive Rookie of the Year buzz he has been getting. New Orleans’ 5-3 record in his starts will carry the Saints into the offseason and provide hope that they can compete for a division title in the terrible NFC South in 2026. It has been a positive second half of the season in New Orleans, which is why the Saints could be even higher in these rankings.

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    The Colts have injury excuses for their 1-7 slide after a 7-1 start. But Jonathan Taylor had an honest assessment after another hard-fought loss. “Obviously, when you lose five, six in a row, you start looking like, ‘Hey, OK, we have to be better.’ Good teams don’t lose five, six in a row,” Taylor said. “And then you look, you’re fighting, you’re fighting, and like I said, it’s hard to win in this league. It’s a small margin of error.”

    Performances by the Falcons like Monday night, or back when they blew out the Bills, have to frustrate Atlanta fans. Why does a team with that upside from game to game have a record under .500? One thing is certain: Bijan Robinson is one of the NFL’s most electrifying players. He had 229 total yards Monday night, likely leading more than a few fantasy football teams to championships.

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    The Buccaneers might decide to keep head coach Todd Bowles. To suggest it’s unwarranted to put him on the hot seat is weird. The Bucs have lost seven of eight. If they blow the NFC South by losing again Saturday against the Panthers, it’s a 1-8 finish and would put Bowles’ record with the Bucs at 35-36, including playoffs. That putrid finish happened when the team got healthier, too. If the Bucs lose and Bowles returns, it should be controversial rather than expected.

    The tide could have turned on Mike McDaniel after two uncompetitive double-digit losses in Week 15 and 16. The Buccaneers aren’t good right now, but a win over them Sunday helps keep the positive vibes going for the second half of the Dolphins’ season. They’re 6-3 after a 1-6 start. It will be a rough offseason dealing with the Tua Tagovailoa situation, and it’s possible 2026 looks like a total rebuild, but McDaniel has probably done enough to make it another season.

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    Lost in the Bengals’ disappointing season is that Chase Brown rebounded very well from a rough start. Cincinnati’s running back didn’t have more than 71 yards from scrimmage in any of the Bengals’ first six games. Since then he has had 100 or more eight times in 10 games, including a season-best 141 on Sunday. The Bengals’ core of skill-position players will be as strong as ever going into 2026. It’s everything else that needs work.

    Dallas finishing 8-8-1 with a win over the Giants in the finale would be fitting. They’re not good, they’re not bad, they have few good wins (Philly being an exception) and not a lot of bad losses (the Cardinals loss was the only awful one). They’re the epitome of mediocrity, and being the only team to finish .500 this season — no other team can unless there’s a Week 18 tie — might be the most appropriate way for the season to end.

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    Can the Lions bounce back in 2026? Their advanced metrics don’t reflect the actual disappointment of Detroit’s season. The Lions are third in DVOA behind the Seahawks and Rams. They’re 10th in offensive EPA and 13th in defensive EPA, which is respectable. Their point differential of +65 doesn’t fit a .500 team. It will be easy for everyone to talk themselves into Detroit being a team that rebounds and makes the playoffs next season.

    Last season, the Colts won eight games despite a team passer rating of 75.8, which was 31st in the NFL. They got better quarterback play in 2025 and were 7-1 before a losing streak and injuries derailed them. The Vikings are 8-8 despite a team passer rating of 74.3, which ranks 31st in the NFL. The Vikings are clearly good enough to be a playoff team in 2026 with decent quarterback play. The question will be how to get that upgrade at QB, whether it’s from J.J. McCarthy or elsewhere.

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    The Ravens probably don’t deserve to jump up this much after one impressive win, which was by far their best game of an otherwise disappointing season. But they are somehow .500 with a chance to capture the AFC North, thanks to the Browns upsetting the Steelers on Sunday. And you can at least tell yourself a story that the Ravens could get hot in a wide-open AFC playoffs. Or they could end a poor season with a depressing loss to a beatable Steelers team. It’s amazing to think of how the offseason might change based on the results of Sunday night’s game.

    It’s not like the Panthers could have been expected to beat the Seahawks, even at home, but losing as the Buccaneers were being upset by the Dolphins was disappointing. Still, the Panthers get one game against a Bucs team that is struggling badly to win the NFC South. Before the season started, they would have been ecstatic with that scenario. They’ll need much better play from Bryce Young, who had just 54 yards Sunday, but the Buccaneers’ defense is nowhere near as good as Seattle.

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    DK Metcalf getting himself suspended should get plenty of blame for the Steelers losing Sunday. They needed him, especially in a goal-to-go situation in the final minute. But the Steelers should score more than 6 points without Metcalf. Now they have to beat a rejuvenated Ravens team in the finale, or the season (and probably Aaron Rodgers’ career) is over. And if that happens, expect another round of speculation over Mike Tomlin’s future.

    It’s not like the teams behind the Packers in these power rankings deserve to be above Green Bay, but the Packers don’t feel like a top-12 team anymore. Their defense without Micah Parsons got exposed against the Ravens, allowing Derrick Henry to rush for 216 yards and four touchdowns. Had the Packers still had Parsons and maybe another injured player or two like Tucker Kraft, they’d be a popular pick to make a run in a wide-open NFC. As is, it might be a decent outcome if the Packers aren’t one-and-done in the playoffs.

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    This is nothing new, but the Chargers are going to have a tough time beating teams in the playoffs that rush the passer well. The Texans, Broncos and Steelers are all in the NFL’s top six in sacks, so those would be treacherous matchups. The Texans sacked Justin Herbert five times in their win over the Chargers on Saturday. It’s tough because the Chargers have a great head coach, great quarterback, top-10 defense and great talent around Herbert. But the injured offensive line is likely the fatal flaw.

    Sean McDermott had a common reason for going for the 2-point conversion and the win in the final few seconds against the Eagles: “Wanted to be aggressive, going for the win.” McDermott wouldn’t say this part, but perhaps the Bills’ playoff situation factored in. The Bills had little chance of winning the AFC East at that point. Did he want to put his team through an overtime in the cold and rain Sunday without much potential payoff, or try to end the game on one play? Even if that didn’t go through his mind, it’s a perfectly reasonable decision and a fine outcome.

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    In the second half at Buffalo, the Eagles did not complete a pass and had just 16 yards. Maybe Philly shouldn’t move down three spots after a win at Buffalo, but the problems with its offense aren’t going away. The Eagles might be getting worse. Their defense was fantastic, keeping Buffalo off the scoreboard for the Bills’ first eight drives (not counting kneeldowns) but it’s hard to go on a playoff run when you can’t crack 20 yards of offense in a half of football.

    The Texans can’t win the AFC South unless the Titans beat the Jaguars on Sunday, but a Week 18 win is still valuable. The Texans get the No. 5 seed with a win and get to face the Ravens or Steelers on wild-card weekend, and either of those teams will easily be the weakest of the four division winners. Houston understands this dynamic, and you’ll see it treat Sunday against Indianapolis like a must-win game.

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    The Bears’ offense was great Sunday night, and even though Chicago lost and was eliminated from contention for the NFC’s No. 1 seed, it was a positive outing. The defense had its issues, but Caleb Williams continues to come into his own. He has already proven he can produce in pressure-filled moments. The Bears lost to the 49ers but can feel even better about their chances of putting up points in the playoffs.

    The Jaguars weren’t just going to walk to an AFC South title, and they were in trouble when the Colts took a 17-14 lead in the third quarter. But this Jaguars team is ascending for a reason. The defense pitched a fourth-quarter shutout and the Jags came back to win. Now all they need is a home win over the Titans in Week 18 to go 13-4 and clinch a division title. What a first season for head coach Liam Coen. And there’s no reason the Jaguars can’t make a deep playoff run. They’re playing as well as anyone.

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    For many weeks, it has been hard to reconcile a team with a defense as bad as the 49ers (26th in DVOA) being a top-five team. San Francisco gave 440 yards and 38 points at home Sunday night. But the Niners scored enough to win, as they’ve done many times this season. Their offense is the hottest in the NFL right now. If they beat Seattle on Saturday night and get the No. 1 seed, that offense will be two home wins from a Super Bowl, which would also be in Santa Clara. Maybe, in an NFL season with so many flawed contenders, the 49ers can pull this off.

    Apparently, chasing the NFC’s No. 5 seed didn’t provide a lot of motivation for the Rams as they lost to the Falcons. Matthew Stafford likely lost his shot at his first NFL MVP award with three costly interceptions, which is a bummer for such a great player. The Rams are still good. But everything since the Seahawks started their comeback in Week 16 is alarming.

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    Drake Maye was already having an MVP-level season. Then in the last two weeks he has gotten better, at least statistically. He threw for a career-best 380 yards in a comeback win over the Ravens and a career-best five touchdowns Sunday against a moribund Jets team. He had never thrown for more than 294 yards or three touchdowns in a game before two weeks ago. The great coach/quarterback combination can go a long way in the playoffs, and the Patriots have that.

    It’s hard to keep the Broncos at No. 3 after the past two weeks. They lost decisively to the Jaguars in Week 16 and barely won as a big favorite over an injured Chiefs team on Christmas. But the body of work is good. If they beat a Chargers team that is resting Justin Herbert in Week 18, they’ll be 14-3 and the No. 1 seed in the AFC. They’re not unbeatable, but nobody in the AFC or behind them in these rankings is this season. It’s still a very good and often disrespected Super Bowl contender.

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    Last season, Sam Darnold’s Vikings went 14-2, but lost in Week 15 and had to settle for the No. 5 seed and a road playoff game, which they lost. It’s wild that in an NFL that could see an 8-9 NFC South champ host a playoff game and that Darnold’s 13-3 Seahawks have to win at the 49ers to avoid a road game in the wild-card round. On the bright side, Seattle isn’t waiting on help from anyone else. With a win the Seahawks are the No. 1 seed, and that’s all they could have asked for at the beginning of the season. The Seahawks’ defense against a red-hot 49ers offense is a phenomenal matchup for Saturday night.

  • 2025 Fantasy Awards show: MVP, flops, regrets and victory laps

    Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy Forecast

    With the end of the 2025 fantasy season, Matt Harmon and Justin Boone host a special BONUS pod and give out awards for the 2025 fantasy season. Harmon and Boone also recap the MNF game between the Atlanta Falcons and Los Angeles Rams.

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    (4:00) – Monday Night Football Recap: Falcons 27, Rams 24

    (37:00) – Fantasy Rookie of the Year

    (1:05:40) – Worst Pick of the Year

    (1:10:10) – Best Pick of the Year

    (1:18:30) – Fantasy Playoff Hero

    (1:20:00)- Biggest Fantasy Regret of the Year

    (1:26:10) – Victory Lap of the Year

    (1:29:30) – 2025 Fantasy MVP

    2025 Fantasy Awards show: MVP, flops, regrets and victory laps

    2025 Fantasy Awards show: MVP, flops, regrets and victory laps

    (Jason Jung)

    🖥️ 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

  • Tiger Woods at 50: Role model and villain … inspiration and fraud … icon and cautionary tale

    Tiger Woods turns 50 today, which means we’ve spent nearly half a century observing him grow from a chubby-cheeked club-toting tot into arguably the greatest golfer the planet has ever seen. We’ve seen Tiger as a wide-eyed young star, a steel-spined assassin, a family man, a single father brought low by his own indiscretions, a resurgent champion, and a legend easing into the elder-statesman phase of his career.

    Woods has completed the career Grand Slam three times, and he’s completed at least that many hero’s journeys, facing down adversity, plunging into darkness, resurfacing into the light. He’s been role model and villain, inspiration and fraud, icon and cautionary tale. He’s cycled through the full spectrum of the American celebrity-industrial complex, the star of both soft-focus puff pieces and ugly candid tabloid scandals.

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    Given all that he’s endured — and inflicted upon himself — it’s no small feat that he’s survived to 50 with both his dignity and his professional standing intact. He inspired every single one of today’s players, and he now stands as one of the key forces guiding golf forward into its coming decades.

    What’s most fascinating about Woods, though, is not the fact that he means so many things to so many people — it’s that he means so many different things to so many people.

    Woods was that rarest of creatures, a child prodigy who carried through on every bit of his early talent. You’ve surely seen the video of him on the old Mike Douglas show in 1978, but it’s nonetheless remarkable watching Woods — still a massively relevant public figure in 2026 — sharing a stage with Jimmy Stewart, whose signature role in “It’s a Wonderful Life” was 80 years ago:

    When Woods won the Masters in 1997, he vaulted from obscurity to worldwide celebrity in the space of a single Sunday. And he instantly became a symbol for everything from a new coarseness in golf — before Woods, pointing and fist-pumping in exultation wasn’t a thing — to an insurgent breaker of racial boundaries.

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    Woods himself endorsed these roles with various levels of enthusiasm. He was happy to embrace a stance of combative dominance, for example, but showed little interest in being a spokesman for race-related interests. He preferred to let his clubs do the talking for him, and for a decade, they sang, winning 14 majors from 1997 to 2008.

    Arnold Palmer brought golf to the masses. Woods brought it to the youth. A few of those kids who had Tiger Woods posters up in their bedrooms would grow up to win Masters tournaments and U.S. Opens. As the McIlroys and Koepkas and Spieths of the world began claiming tournaments, and as a range of personal and health-related troubles kept Woods buried in the field, we always wondered how golf’s new generation would stand up to prime Woods.

    In 2019, at long last, we found out. Woods claimed his 15th major, and first in 11 years, at Augusta in a performance that still seems unbelievable nearly seven years later. He won by outplaying and outsmarting and outlasting players two decades younger than him, charging from behind on a memorable Sunday in the very best kind of flashback. That was another Woods to admire, the gunslinger coming back for one last duel to remind the youngsters how the greats once did it.

    AUGUSTA, GEORGIA - APRIL 14: Patrons cheer as Tiger Woods of the United States celebrates after sinking his putt on the 18th green to win during the final round of the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 14, 2019 in Augusta, Georgia. (Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images)

    AUGUSTA, GEORGIA – APRIL 14: Patrons cheer as Tiger Woods of the United States celebrates after sinking his putt on the 18th green to win during the final round of the Masters at Augusta National Golf Club on April 14, 2019 in Augusta, Georgia. (Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images)

    (David Cannon via Getty Images)

    Woods has let his demons and appetites take a few rounds off him, too. The revelation of his infidelity in 2009 forever stained his pristine image, and more than a few fans have never forgiven him for his transgressions. His later run-ins with law enforcement would barely draw interest if they’d happened within an SEC program or an NFL team, but in the genteel world of golf, they made top-of-the-scroll news. His catastrophic 2021 single-car wreck remains a public mystery, even though it cost Woods many more majors’ worth of rehab.

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    But within those wounds, surgeries, ailments and recoveries is perhaps the most impressive Woods — the never-give-up, never-give-in, never-surrender Tiger. Most elite athletes — and all normal humans — would’ve probably retired from competition after one back surgery. Tiger has had six (and counting…), along with a full range of neck, ankle, shoulder and tendon rehabs. And every single time, at every single post-injury press conference, he vows to return to the golf course eventually, one way or another. Maybe it’s delusion, maybe it’s superhuman determination, but either way, he just keeps coming back.

    One of his motivators in recent years: the opportunity to play golf alongside son Charlie. Their father-son partnership has unlocked a new version of Woods: the doting father. Maybe Charlie Woods will reach the PGA Tour one day; maybe he’ll top out at the high school level. Either way, Tiger will be there beside him, watching and teaching.

    Woods’ loving, prideful comments about his relationship with Charlie are about as close as he ever gets to being introspective about himself and his role in the game. He tends to handle such probing questions the way he used to handle challengers at Augusta or Pebble Beach or St. Andrews: by putting massive distance between themselves and him.

    The funny thing is, Woods’ personal reticence is as out of step with the current golf world as pleated pants and persimmon woods. Scottie Scheffler has opened up about the hollowness at the heart of chasing trophies. Keegan Bradley has been forthright about how, like some hero of Greek myth, the object of his adoration — the Ryder Cup trophy — has broken him. Rory McIlroy has laid his whole heart out on the press conference podiums around the world.

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    But Tiger? Nah. Leave that touchy-feely stuff for the kids. Woods remains steadfast in his pursuit to be the best, and you can’t win races if you’re spending too much time looking under the hood.

    These days, Woods’ clubs can’t talk for him any more, so his reputation does. He’s now one of the prime movers behind the scenes on the PGA Tour, shaping the game’s future against challenges ranging from LIV Golf to declining attention spans. His shadow looms large over the last 30 years of golf, and love him or hate him, he’s clearly determined to make sure he shapes the next 30, too.

    Happy birthday, Tiger. Following you has been a hell of a ride, and it’s nowhere near over.

  • Sean McVay says Rams won’t rest starters in Week 18 despite being out of NFC West race: ‘We need to play better’

    In the past, Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay has prioritized rest as his team prepared for the playoffs. With the Rams in excellent position heading into Week 18 last season, Matthew Stafford and various other Rams starters were held out of action to prepare for the postseason.

    But McVay is changing things up this year. Despite the Rams being out of contention for the NFC West title, McVay said the Rams’ starters will play against the Arizona Cardinals in Week 18, per ESPN.

    “Oh, we’re playing,” McVay said Monday night after the Rams’ 27-24 loss to the Atlanta Falcons. “Yeah, they’re playing.”

    McVay did not elaborate on why he was treating the final week of the regular season differently this time around. When asked whether it’s because the Rams have lost in back-to-back weeks, McVay said the plan was always to play his starters in Week 18, adding, “We need to play better football.”

    “No, they were going to play anyways,” McVay said. “We need to play. We need to play better football. So I don’t know what the consequences are in those different types of things, but we got to play better.”

    Following a tight overtime loss to the Seattle Seahawks in Week 16, the Rams lost a sloppy game to the Atlanta Falcons on Monday. Stafford — who came into the contest as the MVP favorite — struggled mightily in the outing, tossing three interceptions in the 27-24 loss.

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    The only thing on the line for the Rams in Week 18 is playoff seeding. Heading into the final week of the regular season, the Rams are currently the No. 6 seed in the NFC. With the division no longer in play, the highest the team can move up is to the No. 5 seed. While that’s better, it doesn’t drastically improve their chances of hosting a playoff game ahead of the Super Bowl. If the Rams are going to win another championship, they’ll have to win multiple games on the road either way.

    Last year wasn’t the only time McVay opted to rest his starters ahead of the playoffs. The coach also used the method during the 2017 season, when Sean Mannion started over Jared Goff in Week 17. The move backfired, as the Rams lost to the Atlanta Falcons in the wild-card round the following week.

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    Though the Rams are in a similar spot this time around, McVay will let his starters play in Week 18. It’s unclear how much, if at all, Stafford’s race for the MVP played a role in the coach’s decision. Following his poor performance in Week 17, Stafford needs a big game in Week 18 to reassert himself as the MVP favorite.

    While McVay possibly took that into consideration, it’s more likely he truly believes his team needs more work ahead of the playoffs. The Rams have, at times this season, looked like the best the NFL has to offer. After two down weeks, McVay likely wants to give the team one more opportunity to return to form before the postseason begins.