Tag: Fox Sport News

  • As the Raiders reboot, it’s GM John Spytek — not Tom Brady or Mark Davis — who should be the focus

    In late October, it was abundantly apparent that the wheels were coming off the Las Vegas Raiders.

    The team had entered its bye week 2-5 following a gutting 31-0 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs, and word had begun to travel through NFL coaching and front-office circles that head coach Pete Carroll and offensive coordinator Chip Kelly were at odds. Kelly’s scheme and play-calling were not fitting with veteran quarterback Geno Smith and many of the roster’s surrounding pieces. Philosophical differences were festering inside the coaching staff. The offensive line — coached by Carroll’s son Brennan — was a disarray of injuries and failing positional experiments. And eight weeks into the season, league sources with ties to both Pete Carroll and Kelly were predicting a speedy breakup after the season. If not sooner.

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    It was a fascinating development to some in the NFL who were watching from afar and wondering how the Raiders were going to function with the added influence of new minority owner Tom Brady. After all, it was Kelly who pointed directly to Brady as being influential in his decision to join the Raiders, even when the union was seen as an oddity for those who knew Carroll. Not only did Kelly and Carroll lack a prior working relationship, they also historically leaned into different offensive styles and had very different personalities. They were suddenly melded together after the Raiders and Brady failed to land Ben Johnson as their next head coach.

    Only two months in, it wasn’t working. And in the middle of it, the Raiders made a relatively innocuous move that ended up being a harbinger of a more fundamental problem: They signed Tyler Lockett, a 33-year old wideout who had been released by the Tennessee Titans, signaling a disjointed vision of what Las Vegas was trying to be.

    HENDERSON, NEVADA - APRIL 07: (L-R) General manager John Spytek of the Las Vegas Raiders, quarterback Geno Smith and head coach Pete Carroll of the Raiders pose after a news conference introducing Smith at the Las Vegas Raiders Headquarters/Intermountain Healthcare Performance Center on April 07, 2025 in Henderson, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

    It was all smiles and optimism in April when general manager John Spytek, quarterback Geno Smith and head coach Pete Carroll each charted a promising course for the 2025 season. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images)

    (Ethan Miller via Getty Images)

    On one hand, it was an addition that fit Carroll’s win-now mindset. On the other, it ran contrary to a wider vantage of general manager John Spytek, who had espoused beliefs of building, developing and actually playing the young talent that would grow into a long-term core.

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    To the outside world, the Raiders were 2-5 and sinking with problems inside their coaching staff. And now a 74-year-old Carroll was being placated with the addition of another familiar aging face from his Seattle Seahawks era.

    It begged the questions: What exactly was the Raiders’ mission? Who precisely was spearheading it?

    [Get more Raiders news: Las Vegas team feed]

    As one longtime league executive familiar with Davis, Carroll and Brady framed it: The three fundamental people in the organization appeared to be on their own separate pages.

    “Very different visions,” the source said. “I would imagine it’s going to be the same [Raiders] s***.”

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    By Jan. 5, it was.

    Carroll was fired. And those mixed visions delivered the Raiders to a familiar — and potentially deeper — phase of rebooting the franchise. One that may include the trade of defensive end Maxx Crosby and some other veterans before the offseason construction dust settles. And one that will almost certainly include drafting a quarterback with the No. 1 pick in April’s draft.

    Tom Brady’s involvement with the Raiders vs. GM John Spytek’s day-to-day approach

    What it won’t resolve is what some across the league believe is a flawed design: Brady’s operational involvement from afar, rather than as a daily presence inside the building alongside Spytek and Davis. Instead, the franchise is selling change as a “close collaboration” between Spytek and Brady when it comes to the Las Vegas football operations and finding the team’s next head coach. That still won’t draw Brady into the traditional boots-on-the-ground presence of most other high-ranking NFL decision makers.

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    That statement from the Raiders does publicly draw Brady more into the team’s fold when it comes to bearing responsibility for decisions that come next. The Carroll failure? That won’t be pinned to Brady. Nor will the Kelly failure, despite Kelly himself pointing to Brady as the ownership element that drew him toward the Raiders. But the fate of this next hire will go on Brady’s résumé as an owner-executive. It will also amplify the accountability on Spytek and Brady. More than ever, they’re a tandem.

    Yet only Spytek will be around every day, observing the rhythms of the building, overseeing the minute-to-minute grind, absorbing the granular details of what can be the difference between success and failure. That reality should force a recalibration of who is really being tapped to lead the Raiders to a revival. For a while, we’ve speculated that Brady would be that difference maker. The belief existed because Davis alluded to his addition as having that kind of gravity.

    But there’s an argument to be made that Spytek will be the most important piece in all of this, especially once he begins working side-by-side with the head coach whom he and Brady have been charged with finding. Once that coach is in place, Spytek is the one who will have the most consistent contact with him. Not to mention working with Davis on a day-to-day basis. All while Brady’s bandwidth continues to be divided between his analyst job with Fox Sports and his family on the other side of the country in Miami.

    Las Vegas Raiders minority owner Tom Brady, far right, yells encouragement to players as they take the field during the first half of a Raiders training camp mock game at Allegiant Stadium on Saturday, Aug. 2, 2025, in Las Vegas. (L.E. Baskow/Las Vegas Review-Journal/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

    Tom Brady’s involvement with the Raiders as a minority owner is a subject of fascination and scrutiny in the league. (L.E. Baskow/Las Vegas Review-Journal/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

    (Las Vegas Review-Journal via Getty Images)

    Aside from the head coach, that will continue to make Spytek the public-facing executive in this rebuilding endeavor. As it did Monday when he held his season-ending news conference and addressed the firing of Carroll. His meeting with reporters produced some interesting moments, starting with Spytek putting the 3-14 season on his shoulders: “The accountability should start and stop with me. That needs to be said.”

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    Asked if Brady would be more of an on-site fixture in the building, Spytek sidestepped the question in a way that suggested that Brady won’t. But what was most interesting was hearing how Spytek described their relationship.

    “I think people sometimes misunderstand mine and Tom’s relationship,” Spytek said. “We played together one year at Michigan and then we didn’t talk for 20 years. Then he came to [play in] Tampa [where Spytek was a personnel executive]. … We see football similar. We don’t see it the same. We have plenty of discussions and disagreements and I’m not afraid to tell him that. I think that’s kind of why he likes me. But I do believe that we see things similar and we’ve both had a lot of success seeing it that way.”

    “I talk to him a lot,” Spytek added. “He’s aware of what we’re doing. I don’t bore him with the mundane transactions or all that. But any big decision I’ve talked to him about [it]. Any vision, I’ve talked to him about [it]. He’s a great resource for me. He’s a great partner in this for me. I would be not doing a good job and be a fool if I didn’t talk to him. He’s been supportive of me. He can’t be here every day right now, but I promise you I talk to him a lot and he and I are on the same page.”

    Intended or not, that sounds more like Brady is still being used as a resource rather than sitting at the controls every day. It’s hard to know until we see where this goes now that the team has moved on from Carroll. Prior to that decision, Spytek and his role was overshadowed by a Hall of Fame coach and a future Hall of Fame quarterback being portrayed as the franchise’s bellwethers. Now Spytek has his opportunity to take control of that narrative. And he’s going to have to do it by showing what he learned from the first-year failure that cascaded over much of the roster.

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    Interestingly, he reiterated his previous notions of building and sustaining a team — which, again, seemed to be the goal when Brady and the Raiders targeted Ben Johnson before taking a left turn into Carroll’s “win now” mindset. And the next coach?

    “We’re looking for someone to build this the right way and not think that we’ve got to produce 10 wins or whatever next [season],” Spytek said.

    That would be something he learned in his first year as general manager — although it should be noted that Spytek wasn’t part of the Carroll decision. Spytek was hired only days before Carroll, who was ultimately the choice of Davis and Brady. Another thing Spytek appears to have learned from watching the Kelly situation go sideways? He wants the next head coach to name his staff.

    “I want to turn that over to the coach,” Spytek said. “We’re going to have a lot of great conversations about who, why, where — there’s going to be a lot of great football conversations. But my belief has always been you give a lot of the responsibility to the head coach to hire the staff that he wants to hire.”

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    By design, this all sounds different than what happened one year ago. It also sounds more conventional and realistic when it comes to where the Raiders are sitting. They’re holding the No. 1 pick in the draft for a reason. This isn’t going to be a snap-your-fingers worst-to-first scenario like the New England Patriots or Chicago Bears this season. Instead, it looks more like an offseason of roster-churning that will move a lot of veterans out and seek to add more young pieces to lay the foundation.

    The first real test of that is how Spytek handles the Crosby situation after putting the star defensive end on injured reserve (to Crosby’s highly-publicized dismay) to end the season. That played a part in the Raiders securing the No. 1 overall pick and opened the door to aligning the next head coach with the quarterback of their choice. It also preserved Crosby’s trade value by not exposing him to late-season injury risk. If the Raiders move on from Crosby, it will be a showcase of what Spytek can engineer when it comes to a sizable trade — which further elevates his importance when it comes to parsing out his role versus Brady’s.

    At one point Monday, Spytek described the Raiders’ rookies needing to show their biggest jump forward after Year 1, calling the next several months the most important offseason of their careers. And framed success through a very distinct belief.

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    “Winning is fun,” Spytek said. “But it comes at a price. And it is required every day.”

    The same is true for Spytek and Brady. One of them will be in the building paying that price every day. And that’s who people should start focusing on.

  • Early NFL wild-card bets to make right now: Is it finally Josh Allen’s time to shine?

    The NFL playoffs are here. As always, I will aim to give some betting advice and picks for this coming week that gain closing line value between now and kickoff.

    But I also like to start with a bit of advice: Just because the game matters more to the teams and players, it does not matter more to your bankroll. In fact, I almost prefer to go the opposite direction and bet smaller in the playoffs. Now that we have reached the postseason, a lot of the uncertainty the regular-season market tries to price – and smart bettors are capable of exploiting – no longer exists. We have 17-game sample-size data to accurately forecast a sharp spread and total. Injury news has less of an unknown factor throughout the week. There are less lines to price for sportsbooks. This of course applies to main markets like spreads and totals, but also extends to all the derivative player props that can be bet. With more certainty within each game and fewer lines to price, the lines are much sharper.

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    [Check out all of Yahoo’s sports betting content here in our betting hub]

    As betting edges decrease, ideally so should bet size. Our betting “Super Bowl” can be a random Week 7 game. It does not literally need to be the actual Super Bowl. Here are two best bets for the NFL wild-card round:

    ORCHARD PARK, NEW YORK - JANUARY 04: Josh Allen #17 of the Buffalo Bills warms up before the game against the New York Jets at Highmark Stadium on January 04, 2026 in Orchard Park, New York. (Photo by Timothy T Ludwig/Getty Images)

    Is it finally Josh Allen’s time in the playoffs?

    (Timothy T Ludwig via Getty Images)

    Buffalo Bills (-1.5, 52.5) at Jacksonville Jaguars

    Josh Allen gets an AFC playoff run without Patrick Mahomes, Lamar Jackson or Joe Burrow standing in his way. The difficulty is facing a Jaguars team playing lights out on both sides of the ball. The Jaguars have won eight straight games and secured the AFC South with a 13-4 record.

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    The starting place for my handicap is always using NFL market ratings. For the playoffs, I am more reliant on post-Week 17 data than I am post-Week 18 information. Market ratings are created via an unbiased formula to compare closing lines across the league, while weighting more recent games heavier. While there are flaws in this approach worth being aware of, market ratings provide a great starting point to understand spread pricing for NFL games. The reason to avoid using Week 18 data is because so many key players around the league sat (including on the Bills) and therefore the data is muddied. It is important to save an updated copy of market ratings each week to go back and reference. Using this approach, Buffalo is 1.2 points better than Jacksonville. But we need to account for the Jags’ home-field advantage, which is typically worth 1.5 points, bringing us to basically a pick ’em spread.

    The next handicapping factor is matchup specific. Market ratings allow us to price any two teams, but negate on-field intricacies that create diversions from blanket numbers. In this case, I think the matchup clearly favors Buffalo. The Bills strength is a strong dual-threat run game. The Bills play a lot of multi-TE sets, but have tight ends who are capable blockers and downfield pass catchers, creating another dual-threat look. They can generate explosive plays on long runs and play-action passes, and have a very smart QB in Josh Allen to identify weaknesses.

    On the other end, Jacksonville has been very impressive in the pass game. Since acquiring WR Jakobi Meyers via midseason trade and getting TE Brenton Strange back from injured reserve, the Jags’ offense has taken off. The Jaguars have averaged 32.9 points per game since Meyers’ arrival, up from 20.4 earlier in the season. In the final six games, Trevor Lawrence threw for nearly 1,600 yards with a 15:1 TD-to-INT ratio. He was playing at an MVP level. Passing against Buffalo is where things get difficult for Jacksonville. The Bills allow the fewest passing yards per game in the NFL at 156.9 yards per game. In 10 of the Bills’ 17 games, opposing net passing yards were fewer than 100. In nine of the games, the opposing QB rating was below 72.

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    Consistent disruptions, tight coverage and pressure from a strong Bills secondary is where Jacksonville really loses its recent edge.

    Therefore, I am looking to back the Buffalo Bills here — and the early market signals agree. Right now the consensus line is -1.5 (-110), but the ML at -120 represents the best value bet at MGM, since the move onto and off the 1 is about 6-7 cents in NFL betting, and therefore the ML should be around -123. This opened at -115-ish and has seen slight action on the Bills side. I am also reminded of a recent matchup against New England where the Bills took clear gameday late sharp action, so I think it may come here as well.

    Bet: Buffalo Bills ML (-120), up to 1 unit

    San Francisco 49ers at Philadelphia Eagles (-4.5, 45)

    Wondering where the sharp action has been thus far in early playoff betting? Look no further than this matchup. There have been two very clear moves here: toward the Eagles and toward the under. The Eagles opened at 2.5- or 3-point favorites as a consensus price that is now out to Eagles -4.5. Considering the move off the 3, this is a humongous value shift.

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    The total is down from 46.5 to 45, with 44.5s emerging in the market, too. I am not going to steam chase and bet the Eagles here, after missing the value. It’s a basic principle for me to just stay away at that point. However, the total dropping from 46.5 to 45 is a move I will process as a data point, showing the sharp side is the under.

    For NFL totals, understanding key numbers is critical. The opening line through the 46 is not too significant, as 46 is the 17th-most common NFL scoring outcome over the last four seasons. Forty-five is also the 15th-most common scoring outcome, however 44 and 43 are both top five. Seeing signals that this could get down to 44.5 means I definitely want to get in before any 44’s shows up.

    The reason to bet the under here is because these are two run-heavy offenses. Christian McCaffrey and Saquon Barkley are two household names, and both are offensive focal points. Since the 49ers lost key players on defense like Nick Bosa and Fred Warner, teams have been exploiting their front seven and focusing on the rushing attack, while the 49ers have been putting together slow and methodical drives on offense. The Eagles also have the sixth-best defense based on DVOA and allow the fifth-fewest points.

    Bet: Under 45 (-110), up to 0.75 units

  • The Celtics Are Contenders, Concern Level for the Thunder + Unrivaled Day 1 Takeaways

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    We’re bouncing around on today’s episode of The Dunker Spot!

    Nekias Duncan and Steve Jones discuss the surging Boston Celtics, who recently climbed to the East’s second seed. They discuss their current standing and the non-Jaylen Brown standouts, as well as appreciate the level of buy-in Joe Mazzulla has gotten from this group.

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    From there, they bounce around. From the Pistons’ consistent winning, to the Nuggets finding offense without Nikola Jokic, playoff-level questions for the Rockets and Thunder (what’s going on there?), a Rudy Gobert check-in and more.

    Finally, the guys close the show with reactions to the first day of the Unrivaled season.

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

    (2:08) — Boston Celtics
    (9:45)— A quick Pistons salute
    (15:19) — Back to the Celtics
    (24:13) — Portland Trail Blazers
    (31:46) — Denver Nuggets
    (41:20) — Atlanta Hawks
    (45:36) — Houston Rockets
    (51:21) — Oklahoma City Thunder
    (56:36) — Rudy Gobert
    (01:03:27) — Unrivaled takeaways

    Trae Young #11 of the Atlanta Hawks looks on in a break in play against the Toronto Raptors during the first half of their basketball game at the Scotiabank Arena on January 5, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images)

    Trae Young #11 of the Atlanta Hawks looks on in a break in play against the Toronto Raptors during the first half of their basketball game at the Scotiabank Arena on January 5, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images)

    (Mark Blinch/Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on the Yahoo Sports NBA YouTube channel

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

  • Transfer portal: UNLV QB Anthony Colandrea commits to Nebraska

    Nebraska has found its transfer portal quarterback. Again.

    A day after former Notre Dame quarterback Kenny Minchey flipped from Nebraska to Kentucky, the Huskers got a commitment from UNLV QB Anthony Colandrea, according to multiple reports.

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    Colandrea spent his junior season with the Rebels and had a breakout year. He was 275-of-417 for 3,459 yards and 23 TDs with 9 interceptions across 14 games in coach Dan Mullen’s first season in Vegas. Colandrea also rushed 127 times for 649 yards and 10 scores.

    Before arriving at UNLV, Colandrea spent two seasons at Virginia, appearing in 19 games with the Cavaliers. Over those 19 games, he was 352-of-566 passing for 4,083 yards and 26 TDs with 20 interceptions.

    As Colandrea led a UNLV offense that averaged 6.8 yards per play, the Rebels went 10-4 and made their second straight Mountain West title game appearance.

    Colandrea will become the presumptive starter in Lincoln after Dylan Raiola entered the transfer portal at the end of the season. The former five-star recruit suffered a season-ending leg injury nine games into the season. Raiola was completing over 72% of his passes before he was injured and had thrown for 18 touchdowns.

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    He did not provide the rushing threat that Colandrea does, however. Nebraska is looking for a more dynamic offense, as the Huskers are still working toward the team’s first eight-win season since 2016. Nebraska went 7-6 for the second consecutive season under coach Matt Rhule but lost the Las Vegas Bowl to Utah.

    Minchey spent the 2025 season as CJ Carr’s backup for the Fighting Irish. He took an early visit to Lincoln and briefly committed to the Huskers before he was lured away by Kentucky and new coach Will Stein.

  • NFL playoff predictions: Super Bowl LX champion, winners each round and more

    The NFL playoff field is set. The Denver Broncos and Seattle Seahawks are the No. 1 seeds who earned first-round byes, while the New England Patriots and Chicago Bears look dangerous as No. 2 seeds. Plus there are plenty of contenders in the other wild-card weekend slots.

    Who will advance in each round? Who will raise the Lombardi Trophy after Super Bowl LX on Feb. 8 in Santa Clara, California? And what will the score and MVP be?

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    Yahoo Sports’ NFL experts make their picks right here.

    Nate Tice

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    AFC Wild Card
    Jaguars over Bills
    Patriots over Chargers
    Texans over Steelers

    NFC Wild Card
    Rams over Panthers
    Bears over Packers
    Eagles over 49ers

    AFC Divisional
    Texans over Broncos
    Jaguars over Patriots

    NFC Divisional
    Rams over Seahawks
    Eagles over Bears

    AFC Championship
    Jaguars over Texans

    NFC Championship
    Rams over Eagles

    Super Bowl
    Rams 24, Jaguars 20

    MVP
    Matthew Stafford

    Charles Robinson

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    AFC Wild Card
    Bills over Jaguars
    Patriots over Chargers
    Texans over Steelers

    NFC Wild Card
    Rams over Panthers
    Packers over Bears
    Eagles over 49ers

    AFC Divisional
    Broncos over Bills
    Texans over Patriots

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    NFC Divisional
    Seahawks over Packers
    Rams over Eagles

    AFC Championship
    Broncos over Texans

    NFC Championship
    Rams over Seahawks

    Super Bowl
    Rams 28, Broncos 21

    MVP
    Matthew Stafford

    Jori Epstein

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    AFC Wild Card
    Bills over Jaguars
    Patriots over Chargers
    Texans over Steelers

    NFC Wild Card
    Rams over Panthers
    Bears over Packers
    Eagles over 49ers

    AFC Divisional
    Bills over Broncos
    Texans over Patriots

    NFC Divisional
    Seahawks over Rams
    Bears over Eagles

    AFC Championship
    Bills over Texans

    NFC Championship
    Seahawks over Bears

    Super Bowl
    Seahawks 24, Bills 21

    MVP
    Jaxon Smith-Njigba

    Charles McDonald

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    AFC Wild Card
    Bills over Jaguars
    Patriots over Chargers
    Texans over Steelers

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    NFC Wild Card
    Rams over Panthers
    Bears over Packers
    49ers over Eagles

    AFC Divisional
    Bills over Broncos
    Texans over Patriots

    NFC Divisional
    Seahawks over 49ers
    Rams over Bears

    AFC Championship
    Bills over Texans

    NFC Championship
    Rams over Seahawks

    Super Bowl
    Rams 34, Bills 23

    MVP
    Matthew Stafford

    Frank Schwab

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    AFC Wild Card
    Jaguars over Bills
    Patriots over Chargers
    Texans over Steelers

    NFC Wild Card
    Rams over Panthers
    Bears over Packers
    Eagles over 49ers

    AFC Divisional
    Texans over Broncos
    Jaguars over Patriots

    NFC Divisional
    Seahawks over Rams
    Bears over Eagles

    AFC Championship
    Texans over Jaguars

    NFC Championship
    Seahawks over Bears

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    Super Bowl
    Seahawks 17, Texans 10

    MVP
    Jaxon Smith-Njigba

    Andrew Siciliano

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    AFC Wild Card
    Bills over Jaguars
    Patriots over Chargers
    Texans over Steelers

    NFC Wild Card
    Rams over Panthers
    Bears over Packers
    49ers over Eagles

    AFC Divisional
    Broncos over Bills
    Texans over Patriots

    NFC Divisional
    Seahawks over 49ers
    Rams over Bears

    AFC Championship
    Broncos over Texans

    NFC Championship
    Rams over Seahawks

    Super Bowl
    Rams 24, Broncos 20

    MVP
    Matthew Stafford

    Matt Harmon

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    AFC Wild Card
    Jaguars over Bills
    Patriots over Chargers
    Texans over Steelers

    NFC Wild Card
    Rams over Panthers
    Bears over Packers
    49ers over Eagles

    AFC Divisional
    Broncos over Texans
    Patriots over Jaguars

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    NFC Divisional
    Seahawks over 49ers
    Bears over Rams

    AFC Championship
    Patriots over Broncos

    NFC Championship
    Seahawks over Bears

    Super Bowl
    Seahawks 24, Patriots 20

    MVP
    Jaxon Smith-Njigba

    Jay Busbee

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    (Taylor Wilhelm/Yahoo Sports)

    AFC Wild Card
    Bills over Jaguars
    Patriots over Chargers
    Texans over Steelers

    NFC Wild Card
    Rams over Panthers
    Bears over Packers
    49ers over Eagles

    AFC Divisional
    Broncos over Bills
    Patriots over Texans

    NFC Divisional
    Seahawks over 49ers
    Bears over Rams

    AFC Championship
    Patriots over Broncos

    NFC Championship
    Seahawks over Bears

    Super Bowl
    Seahawks 35, Patriots 28

    MVP
    Sam Darnold

  • Ravens fire John Harbaugh after 18 Seasons: What’s next for Lamar Jackson & Baltimore?

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    Where do the Baltimore Ravens go from here after firing head coach of 18 years John Harbaugh? Yahoo Sports’ Andrew Siciliano, Jori Epstein and Frank Schwab discuss the Ravens’ future along with other coaching vacancies across the league at the coordinator level. Closing things out, the crew looks at how coaching situations could affect certain QBs before discussing their “One More Thing.”

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    (0:30) – Ravens fire John Harbaugh

    (25:18) – Cowboys fire DC Matt Eberflus

    (34:05) – Commanders part ways with OC Kliff Kingsbury & DC Joe Whitt Jr.

    (43:05) – Lions part ways with OC John Morton

    (46:49) – Could Tua Tagovailoa play elsewhere in 2026?

    (50:50) – How will head coaching openings affect QBs?

    (1:02:30) – One More Thing

    Who will the Baltimore Ravens hire as their next head coach? (Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images)

    Who will the Baltimore Ravens hire as their next head coach? (Photo by Michael Owens/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

  • Ohio State WR Carnell Tate declares for 2026 NFL Draft

    Another elite Ohio State wide receiver is headed to the NFL Draft.

    Buckeyes wideout Carnell Tate announced Tuesday he is declaring for the draft, where he is likely to be a first-round pick.

    The 20-year-old is a near-lock to become Ohio State’s sixth wide receiver taken in the first round since 2022, joining Emeka Egbuka, Marvin Harrison Jr., Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Garrett Wilson and Chris Olave. Yahoo Sports has the Tennessee Titans taking him fourth overall in its latest mock draft and ranked him as the class’ No. 12 prospect at midseason.

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    A quick scouting report from Yahoo’s Nate Tice:

    Tate has length and excellent hand-eye coordination which gives him a large catching radius, especially near the sideline and in the red zone. His strides eat up ground and his route-running has added real polish this season, opening up his ability to attack at all three levels.

    Jeremiah Smith, the player nearly guaranteed to become the seventh player on the above list in the 2027 Draft, has overshadowed Tate in their shared time together in Columbus, but Tate has been highly productive in his own right.

    In 2025, Tate posted 875 receiving yards and nine touchdowns in 11 games for the Buckeyes, with both numbers ranking sixth in the Big Ten. He was also the No. 3 receiver on Ohio State’s College Football Playoff championship team last year, behind Smith and Egbuka.

    Tate’s exit is hardly a surprise, though it does leave some questions about how the Ohio State passing attack is going to look next year with offensive coordinator Brian Hartline leaving for South Florida. Smith and quarterback Julian Sayin aren’t going anywhere, but Tate and Smith were the only wide receivers with more than 300 receiving yards this season.

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    Quincy Porter, a five-star recruit in last year’s class, might have been a natural choice to slot in opposite Smith, but he was reported to have entered the transfer portal earlier on Tuesday. Mylan Graham, another top recruit in the Class of 2024, also reportedly entered the portal this weekend.

  • College Football Playoff: Oregon to be without star freshman RB Jordon Davison in Peach Bowl

    No. 5 Oregon will be without a major piece of its offense on Friday night in the Peach Bowl against No. 1 Indiana.

    Freshman RB Jordon Davison is listed as out on the Ducks’ Tuesday night injury report. According to the Oregonian, Davison suffered a fractured clavicle in the Ducks’ Orange Bowl win over Texas Tech. Davison rushed 15 times for 42 yards and two scores in the 23-0 victory as Oregon dominated the No. 4 Red Raiders.

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    Given the type of injury, it’s hard to see how Davison would be available if Oregon beats Indiana and advances to the Jan. 19 national championship game.

    Davison is the team’s second-leading rusher with 113 carries for 667 yards. Only Noah Whittington (829 yards) has rushed for more yardage, but no one comes close to Davison’s touchdown total. Davison leads the team with 15 rushing touchdowns. No other Oregon player has more than six.

    Davison had the most carries and yards of any Oregon running back against Tech. Whittington rushed 13 times for 31 yards and Dierre Hill Jr. had five carries for 13 yards. He’s not the only running back who Oregon won’t have against Indiana, either. Jayden Limar is entering the transfer portal. Limar, who has rushed 46 times for 262 yards and three TDs, had three carries against the Red Raiders.

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    Limar had returned for the College Football Playoff after missing most of October and all of November.

    Oregon’s offense has dealt with injuries for much of the season. Leading returning receiver Evan Stewart suffered a knee injury in spring practice and top WR Dakorien Moore returned for the postseason along with Gary Bryant Jr. Moore had three catches in the Orange Bowl while Bryant had one grab.

  • Cameron Boozer, No. 6 Duke rally from largest deficit of the season to beat No. 20 Louisville

    Cameron Boozer and the Blue Devils didn’t make it easy on Tuesday night, but they are headed home still perfect in ACC play.

    No. 6 Duke rallied out of a 12-point deficit in the first half, the team’s largest of the season so far, to beat No. 20 Louisville 84-73 on Tuesday at the KFC Yum! Center. That got the Blue Devils to 14-1 and maintained their early lead in the conference standings.

    Boozer was incredibly efficient to lead the Blue Devils to the win, too. He dropped 27 points and shot 10-of-12 from the field, which matched his season-high field goal percentage, while adding eight rebounds and four assists. He missed just a single 3-point attempt and a short bucket from the center in the lane the entire game. It marked the fourth time in the last five games in which Boozer has scored at least 23 points.

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    Louisville led the whole way in the first half, and even jumped out to a 12-point lead at one point early on. That was Duke’s largest deficit of the season so far, two points more than what they faced against Lipscomb last month before rallying for that win. The Blue Devils led nearly the entire way in their loss to Texas Tech before slipping at the end in a one-point defeat — their only loss of the year.

    [Get more Blue Devils men’s hoops news: Duke team feed]

    The Cardinals took a nine-point lead into the break on Tuesday night thanks to 16 first-half points from Ryan Conwell and 10 made 3-pointers in the first 20 minutes as a group. It was Boozer who kept Duke in it early. He missed just one shot in the first half and matched the six made field goals that the rest of the Blue Devils made from the field combined.

    But Duke finally took off after halftime. The Blue Devils opened the period on a long 14-6 run to get within a single point, and then finally took their first lead of the night after a pair of Boozer free throws.

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    Louisville largely shut down after that, and couldn’t make a bucket from behind the arc. Louisville made just one of its first 14 attempts from deep in the second half, which allowed Duke to finally surge ahead for good. The Blue Devils just held on down the stretch, their double-digit deficit long behind them. In total, the Blue Devils outscored the Cardinals by 20 points in the second half.

    Isaiah Evans finished with 23 points to go with Boozer’s night for Duke in the win. Caleb Foster finished with 20 points after he went 9-of-13 from the field. The Blue Devils shot 51% from the field despite making just seven 3-pointers as a group. Duke entered the game after narrow wins against both Georgia Tech and Florida State to open conference play. That came after its loss to the Red Raiders, too.

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    Conwell led Louisville with 24 points and seven rebounds. Aly Khalifa added 14 points off the bench, and Adrian Wooley finished with 11 points. The Cardinals were without star guard Mikel Brown Jr. He has now missed five straight games with a lower back injury, and was ruled out of the contest ahead of time. Brown has averaged 16.6 points and 5.1 assists in 10 games this season. The Cardinals now sit at 11-4, and just 1-2 in conference play after last week’s loss to Stanford.

    While they may have gotten out to another slow start, the Blue Devils who showed up in the second half on Tuesday night easily erased any doubts about their status as one of the top teams in the country.

  • Bengals CB Cam Taylor-Britt to spend 5 days in jail after driving incident

    Cincinnati Bengals cornerback Cam Taylor-Britt will be spending the next five days in jail.

    Taylor-Britt was sentenced to five days of jail time over a driving incident in September, an Ohio judge ruled on Tuesday, according to ESPN’s Ben Baby. Taylor-Britt was charged with reckless driving, which is a misdemeanor punishable by up to 30 days in jail, a $250 fine or both, and driving without a license. The judge in the case declined to grant Taylor-Britt community service, and insisted that his jail time be served immediately.

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    “That’s a gift,” Hamilton County judge Bernie Bouchard told Taylor-Britt, via ESPN. “Five days instead of 30. He’s got to do them now. It’ll be over soon enough.”

    [Get more Bengals news: Cincinnati team feed]

    The issue stemmed from a driving incident when Taylor-Britt allegedly did a burnout on the wrong side of the road near Paycor Stadium. Court records indicated, according to ESPN, that it took place on Sept. 14, shortly after the team’s 31-27 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars in Week 2 of the season. But county attorneys testified that the incident actually occurred in June. Further specifics are not yet known.

    Taylor-Britt’s attorneys said that he hasn’t driven since October, and that he’s selling the vehicle involved in the incident. He was at a Kentucky transportation office on Tuesday to receive his new license, too.

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    “I just want to apologize, first and foremost for my actions that I’ve put everybody else through,” Taylor-Britt said. “Not intentional in [any] way.”

    The hearing on Tuesday actually started without Taylor-Britt, who was available on standby while the plea deal was being finalized. The judge then instructed Taylor-Britt to show up before noon under the likelihood of serving jail time.

    Taylor-Britt ended the season on injured reserve after he went down in the team’s loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers on Nov. 16. The 26-year-old underwent Lisfranc surgery on his left foot, and is still recovering.

    Taylor-Britt had 21 total tackles in eight games this season, his fourth in the league after the Bengals selected him with the No. 60 overall pick in the 2022 NFL Draft out of Nebraska. He is set to become a free agent this summer after his initial rookie deal expires.

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    The Bengals went just 6-11 this season and missed the playoffs for a third straight campaign.

    “I’m not opposed to it,” Taylor-Britt said Monday about possibly playing elsewhere next season. “At the end of the day, I don’t think anybody would be mad at a new change of scenery.”