Tag: Fox Sport News

  • Bills QB Josh Allen could need procedure for injured right foot during offseason

    Amid the drama in Buffalo the past few days since the Bills were eliminated from the postseason, general manager Brandon Beane told reporters that quarterback Josh Allen might need a procedure on his injured foot during the offseason.

    However, Beane said Allen should be ready for OTAs in the spring. Despite the lower level of severity in Allen’s injury, this is yet one more stick of dynamite added to the late-season implosion in Buffalo. A season that many thought would feature Allen and the Bills playing in Super Bowl LX has quickly turned into a soap opera in the end.

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    Allen was banged up with multiple injuries, especially late in the season, but that’s par for the course in the late stages of any NFL season. Over the last few weeks of the season, Allen was listed as dealing with multiple injuries, including his right foot, which was reaggravated late in the regular season.

    [Get more Bills news: Buffalo team feed]

    Along with Allen’s injury and potential offseason procedure, the Bills are heading into a retooling phase after firing head coach Sean McDermott on Monday. McDermott was the only NFL head coach many of these Bills players, including Allen, have ever known. After nine years that included the team making the playoffs in eight of those seasons and reaching two AFC title games, Bills owner Terry Pegula finally made the move to relieve McDermott of his duties in Buffalo.

    The Bills are entering their most important offseason in nearly a decade, looking for a new direction and head coach. After an overall successful run under McDermott for the last nine years, Buffalo cannot afford to miss on its next hire.

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    Inheriting one of the top five quarterbacks in the league, who’s also a former MVP, doesn’t leave room for many excuses. With a healthy Allen and some tweaks to the roster this offseason, there’s no reason why the Bills shouldn’t be in the midst of a deep playoff run this time next year.

  • Bills owner Terry Pegula takes shot at Keon Coleman, defends Brandon Beane while explaining Sean McDermott’s firing

    Buffalo Bills owner Terry Pegula made waves when he announced the firing of head coach Sean McDermott following the team’s playoff loss to the Denver Broncos. It was a surprising outcome, especially considering McDermott led the team to the playoffs in eight of his nine seasons as head coach.

    Pegula finally shed some light on that decision Wednesday, explaining McDermott was fired due to the team seemingly hitting a “playoff wall.”

    Despite McDermott’s regular-season success — where the coach posted a 98-50 record — the Bills went just 8-8 in the playoffs. While Buffalo reached two AFC championships, the team failed to make it to the Super Bowl despite some excellent play from Josh Allen at quarterback.

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    The team’s most recent postseason loss came with some controversy, as a late interception call resulted in scrutiny from many in the football world. McDermott was one of the most vocal critics of the call, saying Bills fans deserved an explanation after officials ruled Allen was intercepted on a contested catch attempt by Bills wideout Brandin Cooks.

    Pegula said that call had no impact on his decision to fire McDermott. The owner said the outcome of the game, combined with the emotional state of the locker room, pushed Pegula to make the move.

    Pegula said Allen had no input in the decision to fire McDermott.

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    Pegula’s statement appears to refute a Tuesday report that suggested McDermott’s criticism of the team’s roster upset the owner and new president of football operations Brandon Beane. Prior to the playoffs, McDermott reportedly pointed out the team’s roster deficiencies. Pegula and Beane were reportedly not pleased with McDermott’s assessment, and it may have played a role in his firing a few weeks later.

    [Get more Bills news: Buffalo team feed]

    Beane, who previously served as the team’s general manager before being promoted Monday, has been criticized in the past for failing to give Allen a superstar pass catcher after trading Stefon Diggs after the 2023 NFL season.

    The Bills attempted to remedy that by taking wideout Keon Coleman in the second round of the 2024 NFL Draft, but Coleman hasn’t lived up to his draft status just yet. While many have placed the blame on Beane for taking Coleman, Pegula said the decision to draft the wideout was driven by the coaching staff, and that Beane was “being a team player” when the pick was made.

    Twitter sleuths have already uncovered video in which Beane appears excited about the prospect of taking Coleman in the 2024 NFL Draft.

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    Coleman, 22, has 67 catches, 960 yards and eight touchdowns total in his two seasons in the NFL. He’s under contract with the Bills through the 2027 season, though could find himself on another team soon given Pegula’s comments.

    That narrative could be the reason Beane was promoted the day McDermott was fired. That decision drew some criticism, with some believing it was proof Beane won a power struggle over McDermott.

    Pegula didn’t see it that way, saying he did not sense Beane was trying to make a power play on McDermott.

    Beane, who also spoke Wednesday, took offense to that narrative, saying he didn’t appreciate people questioning his character. “That is B.S.,” Beane said.

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    With Beane promoted, he’ll be tasked with finding the next Bills head coach. The team reportedly made a lot of progress on that front Wednesday, putting out multiple interview requests around the league.

    Finding a head coach who can do better than McDermott could prove difficult. And if that head coach fails to live up to those lofty expectations, Beane will presumably have a much harder time avoiding criticism, despite what Pegula said Wednesday.

  • 2026 Fantasy Football: Early breakout candidates for each AFC North team

    NFL Free agency and the 2026 NFL Draft will completely shake up the fantasy football landscape in the coming months.

    Before the roster movement begins, Justin Boone is identifying one fantasy-relevant player from every team who’s most likely to break out during the 2026 season.

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    Early Breakout Candidates

    Early AFC North Breakout Candidates

    Baltimore Ravens – Keaton Mitchell, RB

    Mitchell was showcasing his game-breaking explosiveness during his rookie season in 2023, before suffering an ACL tear that derailed a promising start to his career.

    During that rookie campaign, he averaged 8.43 yards per carry and 10.33 yards per reception as a dangerous change-of-pace back.

    After missing most of 2024 recovering from the knee injury, Mitchell struggled to carve out a role in the first half of this season. However, once he began earning touches, we saw a similar version of the player who appeared to be moving at a different speed than everyone else a couple years ago.

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    Even as a part-time player behind Derrick Henry, Mitchell posted at least 40 yards or a touchdown in five of his last 10 outings on the fantasy calendar.

    While it’s unlikely he’ll ever be a high-volume runner, the Ravens would be wise to expand Mitchell’s involvement in the offense — especially with a 32-year-old Henry entering his 11th season.

    If that occurs, Mitchell would be a weekly flex option with the potential to erupt into an exciting fantasy RB2 if Henry gets hurt.

    Fantasy breakout potential: ★★★☆☆

    Cincinnati Bengals – Erick All, TE

    The Bengals are a team with established stars at almost every skill position, which makes it difficult for someone to break out as a meaningful fantasy option.

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    With Mike Gesicki turning 31 this year and Noah Fant heading to free agency, tight end is the one spot where a player could ascend on the depth chart.

    That brings us to a forgotten man in Erick All.

    As a prospect, All was coming off an ACL tear which caused a draft-day slide to the fourth round in 2024. However, he immediately earned a role on offense and had multiple catches in seven of his first nine outings before suffering another torn ACL that’s sidelined him ever since.

    In November, he provided the first positive update in a while, suggesting he had started running routes and expected to be cleared by the end of the season.

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    Though he still has to prove himself as an in-line blocker, All’s receiving skills make him an intriguing dynasty stash. If all goes well in his recovery, we could be talking about him as a  late-round target in redraft or an early-season waiver wire pickup.

    Fantasy breakout potential: ★★★☆☆

    Cleveland Browns – Quinshon Judkins, RB

    Judkins had a strong rookie season for the Browns with 998 scrimmage yards and seven touchdowns in just 14 appearances.

    The 22-year-old also finished as the RB22 in fantasy points per game (11.2 FPPG) despite dealing with injuries and playing in a subpar Cleveland offense that lacked quality quarterback play most of the year.

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    If we isolate the five games before he suffered his first injury (shoulder), Judkins displayed an even higher level of production as the RB14 over that stretch (14.6 FPPG).

    Unfortunately, his season came to an abrupt end due to a fractured fibula and dislocated ankle in Week 16, which carries a 4-5 month recovery timeline. If all goes according to plan, that should allow Judkins to return to full strength ahead of training camp.

    The second-rounder has already shown he was worth the high pick used to draft him and has the talent to be a difference-maker at this level. Whether he can become an impact player in fantasy will depend on his health and how the Browns address their openings at head coach and quarterback.

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    Fantasy breakout potential: ★★★★★

    Pittsburgh Steelers – Pat Freiermuth, TE

    The departure of Mike Tomlin and offensive coordinator Arthur Smith means the Steelers offense will look a lot different in 2026.

    Aaron Rodgers is unlikely to return at quarterback, so that leaves a massive unknown at the most important position when trying to project the fantasy outlooks for pass-catchers.

    Aside from a couple notable performances, Freiermuth was mostly off the fantasy radar in the most recent iteration of this offense — so change is welcome.

    After all, Freiermuth has been a fantasy factor in the past, finishing as the TE14 in per game scoring in 2024, TE9 in 2022 and TE16 as a rookie in 2021. He also has a pair of seven-touchdown seasons on his résumé, as well as three different campaigns with at least 60 receptions.

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    In the right system, we could easily see Freiermuth re-enter the conversation as a potential top-12 fantasy tight end, but there’s a lot that needs to be sorted out in Pittsburgh before we can say that with any confidence.

    Fantasy breakout potential: ★★★☆☆

    Early Breakout Candidates

  • Manchester City players to refund traveling fans following shock Champions League defeat to Bodø/Glimt

    Manchester City fans who traveled to Norway for Tuesday’s shocking Champions League defeat to Bodø/Glimt will be refunded the costs of their tickets.

    A joint statement from Manchester City’s captaincy group, which features Erling Haaland, Bernardo Silva, Rúben Dias and Rodri, said that paying back the 374 fans (nearly $13,400) who traveled “is the least we can do.”

    “Our supporters mean everything to us. We know the sacrifice that our fans make when they travel across the world to support us home and away and we will never take it for granted. They are the best fans in the world.

    “We also recognise that it was a lot of traveling for the fans who supported us in the freezing cold throughout a difficult evening for us on the pitch. Covering the cost of these tickets for the fans who travelled to Bodo is the least we can do.

    “We’re ready to fight on Saturday for our game against Wolves and than again next Wednesday when we face Galatasaray in front of our amazing fans at the Etihad.”

    Haaland apologized to City’s supporters after the match, calling the result “embarrassing.” Manager Pep Guardiola said “everything is going wrong” and that the team is currently “a little fragile.”

    Bodø/Glimt had never won in the Champions League before Tuesday’s upset inside the 8,270-seat Aspmyra Stadion in Bodø, which features a population of 55,000 people. The defeat was City’s second in the Champions League this season and second in a row following Saturday’s 2-0 Premier League loss to Manchester United.

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    From 2017-2024, Manchester City won six Premier League title, including four straight, and captured the treble during the 2022-23 season, which saw victories in the Premier League, FA Cup and Champions League.

    Manchester City is back in action Saturday in the Premier League against Wolves before playing their final League Phase match of the Champions League next Wednesday against Galatasaray. They are likely to secure a place in the knockout phase, it’s just a matter of whether they qualify for the playoff round or earn an automatic spot in the Round of 16.

  • Yahoo Fantasy x Arena Club Basketball Slab Packs Week 14 drop – Luka Dončić Net Marvels Red Fireworks among chase cards

    We’re back hoops fans with another Yahoo Fantasy x Arena Club drop for Week 14. Yahoo Fantasy Basketball Slab Packs are a brand-new weekly drop featuring real, graded trading cards of the hottest fantasy performers in the NBA.

    If you’re new to Arena Club, here’s the lowdown. Arena Club is the premier online marketplace for sports cards, giving collectors a way to rip packs virtually, buy and sell graded cards and track their entire collection — all in one place. Whether you’re in it for the hobby, the thrill or the chase, Arena Club brings the excitement directly to your screen.

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    [Rip your exclusive Yahoo Fantasy + Arena Club slab pack here]

    Each week, Arena Club curates real, graded NBA cards and builds two types of Yahoo Fantasy Slab Packs:

    Every pack contains a graded card of an active NBA player — but the real treasure is the weekly Chase Cards, featuring some of the top fantasy basketball performers from the past week. These limited-edition hits can reach values up to 20x the cost of the pack.

    Weekly NBA Slab Packs go live every Wednesday at 1 p.m. ET and remain available through Friday at 1 p.m. ET (or until they’re gone). It’s the ultimate mid-week boost for fantasy hoopers and collectors alike.

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    To top it off, use promo code YAHOO at checkout for 20% off your first slab pack or card purchase on ArenaClub.com or the Arena Club app.

    Rip a slab pack today for a chance to pull one of the week’s biggest fantasy basketball stars:

    Luka Dončić, Lakers

    The NBA’s leading scorer has been everything and more for the Lakers this season, chasing his first-ever NBA MVP award. Luka, at 33.5 points per game, is averaging almost 2.0 more PPG than Shai Gilgeous-Alexander in second place.

    LeBron James, Lakers

    King James appears to be back. LeBron has looked like his old self lately, averaging 51.7 fantasy points per game over the past week.

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    Victor Wembanyama, Spurs

    Wemby and Anthony Edwards dueled it out last week with the big man prevailing after scoring 39 points on 12-23 shooting from the floor in the Spurs’ win over Minnesota.

    Cade Cunningham, Pistons

    Cunningham has been dealing with a wrist injury, which has impacted his scoring. But he’s still dishing it out with 30 total assists over his past three games.

    Donovan Mitchell, Cavaliers

    Last week, Spida helped the Cavs knock off the Sixers twice, posting a 35-7-9 line in the first win while dishing out 12 assists in the second.

    Weekly Drops. Real Cards. Real Value. Real Thrill.

    With new cards releasing every week based on real fantasy performance, the Yahoo Fantasy x Arena Club partnership delivers a constantly refreshing lineup of NBA stars — and the chase cards you’ll be talking about all season.

    Don’t miss this week’s release.

    Rip your slab pack, hit a chase card, and upgrade your collection today!

    [Get your Yahoo Fantasy Basketball Slab Pack now]

  • Transfer portal: Ole Miss edge rusher Princewill Umanmielen transfers to LSU

    Princewill Umanmielen is following Lane Kiffin to LSU.

    The Ole Miss edge rusher was a late entrant into the transfer portal and is now set to join the Tigers for the 2026 season, per On3. Umanmielen, whose brother, Princely, also played for Kiffin at Ole Miss, had a breakout season in 2025 and immediately became one of the best pass rushers in the transfer portal when he said he was leaving the Rebels.

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    Umanmielen had 45 total tackles and nine sacks in 2025. He recorded 2.5 of those sacks in the College Football Playoff; he had 1.5 sacks against Tulane and a sack against Miami. Though he didn’t have a sack against Georgia, he recorded seven stops in the Rebels’ upset win in the Sugar Bowl.

    The former Nebraska transfer had 35 tackles and 3.5 sacks in his first two seasons of college football before joining Ole Miss. Princely Umanmielen played at Ole Miss in 2024 after he spent four seasons at Florida and had 10.5 sacks and 13.5 tackles for loss in his final season. Over four seasons at Florida, Princely had 15 sacks.

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    Princewill’s move to Baton Rouge is a huge addition for an LSU defensive line that did not have a standout pass rusher in 2025. The Tigers totaled just 27 total sacks all season and Harold Perkins — who is off to the NFL — was the only player who had more than 2.5 sacks. No player returning to the LSU roster in 2026 had more than two sacks a season ago.

  • Four Verts: Broncos still match up well with Drake Maye and Patriots’ offense, and what was Terry Pegula thinking?

    Although it’s the conference championship round edition of the Four Verts column, we’re going to slightly break with tradition and react in real time to a day-of news conference that demands further analysis. But first, this weekend’s AFC championship game.

    Broncos can still advance to the Super Bowl with their defense

    After a thrilling win over the Bills to advance to the AFC title game, the Broncos received incredibly unfortunate news when it was revealed that starting quarterback Bo Nix broke a bone in his ankle in the waning moments, requiring season-ending surgery. Nix had a roller-coaster performance, struggling until crunch time, but his presence will be sorely missed as the Broncos turn to backup quarterback Jarrett Stidham to lead the team to the Super Bowl. That’s going to be a tall task considering this is Stidham’s first non-preseason action since the 2023 season, but Denver still has a weapon on its side that can help the Broncos punch their ticket to Super Bowl LX: the defense.

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    This Broncos defense hasn’t been quite as dominant as the group was during last season, but Denver still has so much high-end talent at key spots that it can force the action and be the reason why it wins the AFC title game. Drake Maye will be a tough test as he rapidly ascends to being one of the best quarterbacks in the league, but the Texans gave that offense some extreme fits in the divisional round and the opportunity is there to muddy up what the Patriots are trying to do.

    [Get more Broncos news: Denver team feed]

    Even though the Patriots are in the AFC championship game, their win over the Texans showed that they still have a ways to go in terms of talent acquisition as they continue to build around Maye. Of the Patriots’ 15 drives in that game, nine of them failed to gain a first down. Over those nine drives, they ran 26 plays for 5 yards — 0.2 yards per play. Not a typo.

    The wet snow played a factor, but the Patriots also didn’t have players who could consistently stay in front of the Texans’ raucous pass rushing duo of Will Anderson Jr. and Danielle Hunter, and on most drives they weren’t very threatening to the Texans’ defensive backs.

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    Denver might not have the pure duo of destruction that Houston has, but it led the league in sacks with 68 with a strong group of pass rushers lead by Pro Bowler Nik Bonitto. The Broncos had eight players with at least four sacks this season and there’s no reason to expect that they won’t be turning the heat on Sunday with a shaky Patriots offensive line. Maye has shown this season that he’s prone to strip sacks in a severe way and if pass rushers can get their hands on the ball once or twice, they’ll have a better chance of giving their offense supreme field position to try and score with a backup quarterback.

    The Broncos have shown that sometimes the high-end rushing units over the past two seasons can cause damage to their defense, but New England isn’t as threatening as Buffalo is on the ground, and the Broncos did much better against Buffalo’s run game this season than compared to last season. According to TruMedia, the Bills had only four games this season where they generated negative expected points added with their designed runs (which is absurd). New England has only four games all season where it generated positive expected points from designed runs. These are not the same beasts whatsoever.

    It won’t be easy because it’s hard to throw a backup quarterback in the AFC title game, but Denver is equipped to give it a real shot because its defense matches up well against New England — as long as it can survive the drives where Maye shows why he’s being considered for the MVP award this season.

    Terry Pegula … why?

    It’s rare that a day-of news conference gets included in this column, but Bills owner Terry Pegula gave us a moment too purely chaotic to ignore. As is custom after firing a head coach, especially one of Sean McDermott’s stature, Pegula had a news conference Wednesday morning to answer questions from reporters about the move and what’s next for the Bills.

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    The end of Buffalo’s season was chaotic, but this is a routine occurrence. Instead of a normal question-and-answer session, Pegula flew in on a dragon and spewed hot fire all over the media in attendance, making waves across the internet immediately. He spoke his version of the truth, which is really all that matters since he owns the team, but what he actually said ranged from nonsensical to outright nasty throughout the course of this media conference that will go down as a core moment for this era of Bills football.

    Pegula said that he fired McDermott, who went 98-50 over his nine seasons as Bills head coach, because they lost to Denver. Anyone who watched the game, or even the highlights, can tell you that explanation is odd considering Josh Allen had several turnovers that no coach in the world would tell him were sound football plays. Considering the Bills turned the ball over five times, and the following Broncos’ drives had an average starting point of their own 48-yard line, giving up only 33 points is not that bad of a day at the office. In fact, the Bills gave up only one touchdown drive coming off of those five turnovers and forced the Broncos to settle for field goals after securing prime field position. It seemed like McDermott’s defense was doing its job, but Allen couldn’t get a grip and kept turning the ball over. For some reason, that was the justification Pegula needed to let go of McDermott, even though on face value it immediately smells bogus.

    According to reporters, Pegula claimed that Allen and a handful of players were in tears after the game, to the point that Allen didn’t even acknowledge Pegula after the defeat in Denver. That’s a fairly strange thing to admit in this setting, but OK. He followed that up by saying after he saw how much pain Allen was in, it was time to do better. Now that part is not up for debate, but this game was so blatantly careless on Allen’s part that pinning this firing on his emotional reaction after the game is baffling. Maybe he was upset over his own poor plays, having just one too many gaffes to get Buffalo the win.

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    At the end of the day, Pegula doesn’t need to do all this to justify his firing of McDermott. The obvious truth is this: He fired McDermott because he wanted to. It’s that simple. The explanation of this particular game being the breaking point makes little sense that there aren’t many rational strings to pull on. It would’ve been better to just say he wanted to go in a different direction without the extra stuff. All of that was bad, but Pegula really laid bare the fact that he has a very strong relationship with Brandon Beane, who was promoted to president of football ops while also still being the team’s general manager, during a question about the wide receiver room.

    Prior to the season starting, Beane had an infamous radio segment where he aired his complaints over people “bitching” about the wide receiver talent was “one of the dumbest arguments he’s heard.” He said the bigger priority was fixing the defense, and Buffalo scored enough points the season prior that it wasn’t a huge concern. Fast forward to now, and it’s clear that the Bills lack firepower at wide receiver. Even though Beane was the one who put his voice to the strident defense of the wide receiver room, Pegula actually squared their troubles on the coaching staff — specifically, its decision to draft Keon Coleman in 2024 at the top of the second round.

    “The coaching staff pushed to draft Keon,” Pegula said. “I’m not saying Brandon wouldn’t have drafted him, but he wasn’t his next choice. That was Brandon being a team player and taking advice from his coaching staff who felt strongly about the player. He’s taken, for some reason, heat over it, and not saying a word about it. I’m here to tell you the true story.”

    Well, there’s already documented proof that Beane did in, fact, say several words about it. It’s on YouTube. It’s on Reddit. It’s on every social media website after this weekend. There was absolutely no need to sideswipe the coaching staff and Coleman who is still on the team!

    That’s a level of dysfunction and pre-built loyalty that can make even a job where Josh Allen is the quarterback seem a bit undesirable. Pegula clearly has close ties to Beane, which is tough for a potential outsider coming in. The tougher part is that this situation is about as pressure-cooked as Baltimore, even though Pegula claimed it’s not a “Super Bowl-or-bust” rule for the incoming coach. That seems a bit incompatible with the idea of firing a head coach who made it to the divisional round or better in six straight seasons. The only next step is the Super Bowl. Anything less will feel like a failure. It’s not realistic for Pegula to paint the picture of an emotionally charged, sobbing locker room as a space where it’s not Super Bowl-or-bust. Clearly, that’s the expectation the team has set on itself.

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    This looks to be about as toxic as it gets for a team with a legitimate Hall of Fame quarterback in his prime. Allen having that game doesn’t strip that status away from him, but pinning his mistakes on McDermott doesn’t feel or sound right. Coming off of firing McDermott, the Bills’ owner had a chance to steer the franchise back in the right direction. Instead, he tore a hole in the spacetime continuum and it’s worth asking one simple question: Why?

    Rams’ recent performances won’t cut it against Seattle

    The NFC title game will be decided by NFC West rivals when the Seahawks and Rams take the field Sunday, but these teams haven’t been playing the same quality of football since they last met.

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    This isn’t meant to say the Rams are bad or anything because obviously they are one of the elite teams in the NFL, but now that there are only four clubs left in the playoffs, it’s nitpicking season and the Rams have just been a tick off over their recent run of games in a way that Seattle, especially on defense, hasn’t. The Rams are 2-0 in the postseason with road wins over the Panthers and Bears, but neither victory has felt like the team that shredded the NFL all season.

    The Rams have had two recent problems that have plagued them, both of which they’re just going to have to power through. First, Stafford has been getting dinged up throughout the course of these games and it affects his accuracy as the game goes on. He’s still capable of making big-time throws, but the down-to-down consistency hasn’t been there like it was for the majority of the regular season. There’s enough around Stafford to keep the Rams afloat during these ruts until he can get back into form with a few throws, but that’s going to be a tough strategy to be forced into against Seattle, who has a much tougher defense than Carolina or Chicago.

    Second is the fact that their defense seems to have hit the limit on what is possible given their current personnel. Chris Shula has done a great job coordinating this unit, but the Rams haven’t been as great as they were over the first half of the season. Since Week 10, including the playoffs, the Rams’ defense ranks 19th in both yards per drive (33.1) and points per drive allowed (2.1) after ranking ninth (29.6) and second (1.5) in those respective stats over the first nine weeks of the season. Chicago averaged nearly 40 yards per drive in the divisional round, but hurt themselves too many times to capitalize. It’s a defense that’s meticulously coordinated and reliant on splash plays from the defensive line to hide some of its warts.

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    Building a defensive backfield out of non-priority draft picks and mid-tier free agents has slowly become an issue for the Rams. This is where the years of trading away first-round draft picks, which was objectively worth it considering they won the Super Bowl, is hurting them. Luckily, for those linebackers and defensive backs, the Rams are able to get an immense amount of pressure on the quarterback ranking second in pressure rate (42.9%) since Week 10, despite their low sack rate (5.4%, 25th). The Rams’ run defense is sound, but has also become susceptible to big plays, ranking fifth in designed rushing success rate (35.7%), 17th in expected points added per designed rush (-0.04) and 23rd in yards after contact per rush (3.2). Seattle’s rushing game took a big hit with the loss of running back Zach Charbonnet last weekend, but the big play ability of Kenneth Walker III is always lurking.

    Seattle’s defense has gotten stronger recently, allowing just 19 points over its previous three games, two of which came against a red-hot 49ers offense. The Seahawks rank No. 1 or No. 2 in so many defensive efficiency categories it’d be too time-consuming to list them all, but that’s not even necessary. Just turn on the tape from last weekend and witness the monstrosity (complimentary) that Mike Macdonald has built in Seattle.

    The Rams better tap back into their A-game or else Seattle might wind up shoving them in a locker repeatedly.

    C.J. Stroud is at an inflection point

    Yo. What in the world was that? C.J. Stroud had one of the worst playoff games in recorded history last weekend. He looked completely discombobulated and made some bizarre decisions with the football, leading to the Texans’ season-ending loss. Houston’s defense certainly did its job by forcing a three-and-out or better on nine of the 15 New England drives, but Stroud was so destructive that it didn’t matter. Houston appears to have no desire to move on from Stroud, which is reasonable, but it’s hard not to feel like Stroud is at an early inflection point with how he played over the Texans’ two postseason games.

    Compared to his last two postseason appearances, this was a completely different story. In his previous four playoff games, Stroud completed 66% of his passes, averaged 8.5 yards per attempt and threw just one interception over the span of those four games. He threw five interceptions in this postseason alone, with four of them coming during his disaster of a performance against the Patriots. He was making absurdly poor throws, chaotic decisions as a ball-handler and generally could not seem to get into a groove at any point in the game. It was such a sharp drop-off from his regular season, where he posted a career high 61.1 mark in ESPN’s Quarterback Rating metric and ranked 11th in the league in QBR.

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    Stroud hasn’t had a season that’s looked as clean as his rookie year in the two years since then, but he actually was playing some good football for the most part in tough situations. Factoring in his entire career, this playoff run, and more specifically the Patriots game, is way out of line from how he usually plays. However, it’s hard to erase the images of him flailing out of control to knock the Texans out of the playoffs after their defense played such a strong game. In the four drives immediately following a Texans turnover, their defense held New England to 17 yards on 11 plays, including a fumble to get the ball back, which was rewarded with only a field goal.

    The Texans did give up three touchdown drives, but they certainly stopped the Patriots enough times to be rewarded on the back end. Stroud just wasn’t any good. The glass-half-full view is that, when compared to the totality of his résumé, this is an extreme outlier. However, it’s hard to rinse how awful those turnovers were and how rapidly they seemed to escalate. Stroud definitely needs a reset after that performance, but he’s still young and there’s plenty of time and ability to bounce back in a big way.

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    For now, he’s going to have to be the subject of debate shows for an offseason. That comes with the territory of being a player who has expectations due to previous success. In a way, the (sometimes outlandish) criticism is a nod to the idea that he’s better than this, but Stroud still needs to get over whatever panicked feelings he was having during the playoff games. He’s just better than that. An offseason reset seems like it would do him a world of good.

  • Cody Bellinger reportedly agrees to 5-year, $162.5 million deal with Yankees

    Cody Bellinger is running it back with the New York Yankees.

    The free-agent outfielder reportedly agreed to a five-year, $162.5 million contract to return to the Bronx on Wednesday, according to ESPN’s Jeff Passan, after opting out of the final year of his previous contract.

    Passan reports that Bellinger’s new deal includes opt-outs after the second and third seasons, a full no-trade clause and a $20 million signing bonus.

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    The deal means the Yankees get both of their free-agent outfielders back. 2025 starting center fielder Trent Grisham accepted the $22.025 million qualifying offer earlier in the offseason, meaning fans can once again expect to see an Aaron Judge-Grisham-Bellinger outfield at Yankee Stadium in 2026, with Jasson Domínguez still waiting in the wings.

    Bellinger joined the Yankees via trade last offseason as something of a gamble. He has both won an MVP award and been cut loose by a contender with a need at his exact position. He led the NL in Wins Above Replacement (Baseball Reference) in one season and ranked 814th out of 815 two years later.

    The Dodgers non-tendered him in 2022 after another down year, setting up a resurgent 2023 with the Chicago Cubs, who gave him a three-year, $80 million contract the following season. However, they decided to move on from him after a down 2024, setting up a trade in which the Yankees landed him for very little.

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    Bellinger enjoyed another bounce-back year in a new setting in 2025. His bat played well at Yankee Stadium to the point that he posted his most home runs (29), total bases (282) and walks (57) since his MVP season in 2019. That production, combined with his ability to cover all three outfield positions, made the decision to opt out of his contract a no-brainer.

    While a number of teams were in the market for Bellinger — including the Dodgers, who eventually signed Kyle Tucker instead — the Yankees were able to get the deal done, and Bellinger is back in the Bronx. A 30-year-old player with his history of injuries and inconsistency can be a risky bet, but the Yankees saw the potential reward firsthand and decided they wanted to take another spin.

  • Keon Coleman NFL Draft video shows Brandon Beane talking up WR after Terry Pegula blamed Bills coaches for pick

    Buffalo Bills wideout Keon Coleman had no reason to think he would be the NFL’s main character on Wednesday, but team owner Terry Pegula had other plans. Pegula took quite the shot at the 2024 second-round pick, implying his draft pick was a decision made by recently fired head coach Sean McDermott.

    During the team’s end-of-year media availability Wednesday, Pegula interrupted a question aimed at team president Brandon Beane to clarify Beane’s involvement in drafting Coleman.

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    Pegula’s response read:

    “I’ll address the Keon situation. The coaching staff pushed to draft Keon. I’m not saying Brandon wouldn’t have drafted him, but he wasn’t his next choice. That was Brandon being a team player and taking advice of his coaching staff, who felt strongly about the player. He’s taken, for some reason, heat over it and not said a word about it. But I’m here to tell you the true story.”

    Coleman, who the team selected with the No. 33 overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, has not lived up to his draft status yet. In two seasons, Coleman has 67 catches, 960 yards and 8 touchdowns. He’s under contract with the Bills through the 2027 season, though maybe not for much longer.

    During that period, the Bills have desperately needed a star receiver to step up and help quarterback Josh Allen, who was throwing to Brandin Cooks and Mecole Hardman in big moments during the team’s divisional round loss to the Denver Broncos.

    [Get more Bills news: Buffalo team feed]

    While Pegula took the heat off Beane for the selection, X sleuths were quick to find evidence suggesting the team’s owner was incorrect. The team released a nearly 29-minute video following the 2024 NFL Draft which contains multiple instances in which Beane seemed more than happy to take Coleman in the second round.

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    In the first clip, Beane said he was happy Coleman ran a poor 40-yard-dash, because it would give the team a better chance to take him in the draft.

    In the second clip, Beane tells Laura Pegula — Terry’s daughter — that the team has its sights set on Coleman at the beginning of the second round of the draft.

    Both clips are small snippets from a video meant to hype and promote the team’s draft picks, so it’s worth considering them in that context. Beane very obviously isn’t going to trash a potential draft pick while cameras are rolling. And the Bills wouldn’t have used that footage in a video meant for fans had Beane questioned the pick.

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    In that context, there’s enough wiggle room that Pegula’s version of the story could be accurate. At the same time, Beane does seem excited about the possibility of taking Coleman, even months before the draft. Beane was, at the very least, a fan of Coleman’s game.

    Beane, to his credit, stood by the decision Wednesday, later calling Coleman “my pick.”

    Beane said the reasons for Coleman’s struggles so far are due to off-the-field issues and his maturity. But Beane also expressed confidence in the receiver going forward, saying, “We still believe in Keon Coleman.”

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    The Bills — and Beane — will need Coleman to take another step forward next season. Allen’s supporting cast has been criticized for years, and the quarterback could desperately use a star wideout to rely on in big moments.

    If that’s not going to be Coleman, Beane is going to have to give Allen another option. And if that option doesn’t pan out, it will be tough for Pegula to put the blame on anyone else.

  • Josh Allen and Bills the latest example of GM’s best recipe to outlast coach in quick-trigger NFL

    Exactly two years ago today, Josh Allen sat at his locker.

    Thirty-six minutes had passed since the Buffalo Bills lost a home divisional playoff game to the Kansas City Chiefs, 27-24.

    The Bills’ quarterback, a year away from his first MVP title, stared alternately down and into space. He accepted some embraces and brief farewells, but he shared few words.

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    For the third time in four years, Patrick Mahomes had sent a contending Bills team home.

    I wrote then: Would head coach Sean McDermott get another chance at snapping the franchise’s postseason streak?

    Would team owner Terry Pegula try to disprove Albert Einstein’s definition of insanity, and see if the same recipe — at least in the trio of top NFL roles at head coach, general manager and quarterback — could produce different results?

    ORCHARD PARK, NEW YORK - DECEMBER 1: Josh Allen #17 of the Buffalo Bills celebrates with head coach Sean McDermott in the snow after an NFL football game against the San Francisco 49ers at Highmark Stadium on December 1, 2024 in Orchard Park, New York. (Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images)

    QB Josh Allen and Sean McDermott, pictured in 2024 during Allen’s MVP season, were full of smiles during most of the Bills’ regular season. It was a different scene during the playoffs. (Photo by Kevin Sabitus/Getty Images)

    (Kevin Sabitus via Getty Images)

    Twice more, McDermott coached way-above-average Bills seasons. The 2024 Bills won 13 regular-season games and two playoff games before Mahomes Mahomesed them again. The 2025 Bills won 12 regular-season games and beat the Jacksonville Jaguars in Jacksonville before losing in overtime to the Denver Broncos. (Cue officiating questions for both games.)

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    The question has never been whether McDermott is a strong head coach. The question is whether he would take this Bills team all the way.

    This week, Pegula chose not to continue trying to disprove Einstein’s theory. The Bills fired McDermott on Monday, two days after their latest loss.

    “It’s been one year after another, and that was the sense of: How do we overcome this?” Pegula said Wednesday morning in a media conference. “And I just couldn’t see us doing that with Sean. That’s why I relieved him. It’s not an easy decision, trust me, with that success.

    “But what is success? Is success being in the playoffs seven years in a row with no Super Bowl appearance?”

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    [Get more Bills news: Buffalo team feed]

    Criticism has and will come for the Bills for firing a beloved coach with a striking track record of success. Criticism furthers as general manager Brandon Beane not only keeps his job, but receives a promotion, amid a roster compilation that league sources believe has serious holes.

    And yet, logic and emotion both curry arguments supporting Pegula’s decision. Logic dictates that the Bills have a better chance of hiring a great coach during Josh Allen’s prime than afterward. Logic sometimes also dictates that change can shake a group out of a rut — a philosophy seemingly sweeping the NFL as 10 of 32 head coaches turn over this offseason.

    Then there’s emotion. Pegula said last weekend’s Broncos loss prompted the McDermott firing, even though Pegula strongly believes that a play ruled an interception was actually a catch by receiver Brandin Cooks. Why, then, let an officiating-colored game decide a coach’s future?

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    Pegula felt his players’ pain.

    “I want to take you in the locker room after that game,” he said. “I looked around. First thing I noticed was our quarterback with his head down, crying. I looked at all the other players. I looked at their faces and our coaches. I walked over to Josh. He didn’t even acknowledge I was there. First thing I said to him, I said, ‘That was a catch.’ We all know what I’m talking about.

    “He didn’t acknowledge me. He just sat there sobbing. He was listless. He had given everything he had to try to win that game. And looking around, so did all the other players on the team.

    “I saw the pain in Josh’s face at his presser and I felt his pain. I know we can do better and I know we will get better.”

    Bills’ firing of McDermott, and vision for next coach, a reminder of Champagne problem that MVP QBs bring

    Heavy is the head of the team that fronts an MVP quarterback and doesn’t go all the way.

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    Few in the NFL doubt that John Harbaugh and Sean McDermott are in the top tier of available coaches this cycle. But the Ravens haven’t reached a Super Bowl during Lamar Jackson’s first seven seasons, including two MVP years for him. Eight years of Josh Allen, including a 2024 MVP campaign, similarly produced seven playoff berths but no conference title.

    And while questions about each roster will come, NFL general managers who find the elusive answer to the question of quarterback historically get a long leash. Quarterback demand outweighs supply. Hitting on a draft pick often guarantees NFL general manager stability even more than wins, losses and aggregate talent acquisition.

    The Bills traded up from 12th to seventh overall in the 2018 NFL draft to select an at-the-time raw Allen. The gamble paid off. Beane continues to reap the benefits of overseeing that maneuver.

    “I don’t know if anybody knows it in this room,” Pegula said Wednesday, “but Josh Allen wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for this guy pushing and pushing and pulling a Houdini in that draft to get to the position where we could pick him.”

    An answer at quarterback not only drastically raises the floor and ceiling of a team’s success. It also is the best recruiting tool a team has for its next coach, as the Giants showed with Jaxson Dart helping recruit Harbaugh to believe in a four-win team.

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    “Our phones are ringing and we’re going to begin that process,” Pegula said. “I can tell you this: There’s desire. I don’t know about pressure right now, but there’s a lot of people that want to look at taking this job. There’s a lot of interest.”

    The Bills job isn’t without its drawbacks. In addition to questions about receiver depth (Beane touted his offensive line, running back and tight end Wednesday when asked) and pass rush, the expectations for McDermott’s successor will be sky high.

    The Bills are hiring their next coach to win a Super Bowl before Allen’s window closes. Pegula and Beane’s insistence Wednesday that their “great” roster couldn’t overcome “good” coaching will ring in the ears of candidates.

    Even as Pegula insisted he “can’t say … to somebody coming in” that his franchise is in Super Bowl or bust mode in 2026, the undercurrents will ring loudly.

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    So the Bills must ask themselves: What should they most prioritize in their next head coach?

    Who, and what, should Bills prioritize in search to maximize Allen’s prime?

    In the NFL’s constant search for the next Sean McVay, 30-year-old candidates like the Denver Broncos’ Davis Webb and Jacksonville Jaguars’ Grant Udinski allure team owners searching to fill the six remaining NFL head coach openings.

    Webb in particular has ties to Buffalo, as a former Bills backup quarterback.

    But some in the NFL ask: Can Buffalo “risk” waiting on a coach’s learning curve as Allen’s 30th birthday looms in May? Three of the four coaches hired so far this cycle had previous NFL head coaching experience; the fourth, Jeff Hafley, was Boston College head coach before the Miami Dolphins hired him this week.

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    “Feel like you need an established guy up there,” one NFC coach told Yahoo Sports of the Buffalo opening. “Window is right now and closing.”

    Former Bills (and Allen-era) offensive coordinator Brian Daboll is a popular candidate after the New York Giants fired him in November. But Daboll may be more sensible as an offensive coordinator to support a head coaching candidate, maximizing the coaching talent Buffalo can attract. Pairing Daboll with Webb, whom he coached in Buffalo and New York, or with 2025 offensive coordinator Joe Brady, are likely to be options the Bills discuss.

    Brady is also considered a popular coaching option. But the Bills may need to ask themselves whether they believe a team that just didn’t get over the hump with Brady in house — and turned the ball over five times in the loss, much less — can justify Brady as their answer.

    Certain schematic influences could help Allen, too.

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    Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak, at 38, is likely to get a job after leading Seattle to the third-highest scoring offense this season and eighth overall. The Seahawks ranked top-10 in passing and rushing both in a balanced attack while receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba led the league with 1,793 receiving yards. With the Bills’ criticism surrounding the receiver room, Kubiak could offer a vision that has both elevated a great receiver to the league’s best while also featuring more heavily running backs and tight ends — areas in which the Bills already have strong infrastructure in place, one NFC talent evaluator speculated.

    Bills running back James Cook led the league last year with 16 rushing touchdowns and this year with 1,621 rushing yards. Kubiak’s wide-zone runs could mesh well with Cook’s skill set, the talent evaluator said, while perimeter runs rather than power runs could feature Allen’s mobility while better protecting him from the volume of hits he’s taken.

    Pegula said Allen did not have input in the decision to fire McDermott but will have input in hiring McDermott’s successor.

    “The starting quarterback will be part of the team to help select a new coach,” Pegula said. “He’s going to be working with us. And anything else, his feelings, I want to keep that private.

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    “His personal opinion, I keep personal.”

    The Bills’ ability to offer an elite quarterback to their candidates, Pegula will not.

    “We have an MVP quarterback in Josh Allen,” he said. “I’m looking forward to having a successful coaching search. I know this is a desirable job.”