Tag: Fox Sport News

  • How serious is Drake Maye’s injury + Did Sam Darnold’s success contribute to Vikings GM firing?

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    Yahoo Sports’ Andrew Siciliano and Frank Schwab react to reports of Drake Maye missing practice ahead of the New England Patriots’ matchup against the Seattle Seahawks in Super Bowl LX. Plus, did Sam Darnold making the Super Bowl contribute at all to the Minnesota Vikings firing GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah? We’ll discuss on today’s show!

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    (00:45) – Greetings from San Francisco

    (6:35) – Drake Maye’s shoulder injury

    (12:00) – Vikings fire GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah

    (22:00) – Is San Francisco a good SB city?

    (26:15) – Raiders hire HC Klint Kubiak, Cardinals hire HC Mike LaFleur

    (36:30) – Favorite and least favorite coaching hires

    (38:55) – Rams extend GM Les Snead & HC Sean McVay

    (48:10) – 49ers hire DC Raheem Morris

    (51:20) – One More Thing

    🖥️ 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

  • World Baseball Classic 2026: What’s the deal with all the WBC insurance issues?

    In April 2025 — nearly 11 months before the 2026 World Baseball Classic — Mets superstar Francisco Lindor proudly declared his intention to participate in the triennial tournament. Lindor would serve as Puerto Rico’s team captain, an honor he carried during the 2023 event. But the 2026 edition would have added significance for Lindor, with Puerto Rico set to host WBC games in San Juan for the first time since 2013.

    But on Friday, less than a week before the WBC roster announcement coming Thursday, news broke that Lindor had been denied the necessary insurance coverage due to a “cleanup procedure” on his right elbow that he underwent following the 2025 MLB season. The issue isn’t expected to hamper Lindor in spring training or beyond, but it was significant enough to preclude his participation in the upcoming WBC.

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    Predictably, that revelation unleashed a torrent of fury in Puerto Rico, where locals were eager to see their island’s biggest sporting star shine on home soil. The Lindor news came days after the team’s second-biggest draw, Astros infielder Carlos Correa, also failed to secure coverage for reasons related to his injury history. The same was true for a handful of other supplementary players on Puerto Rico’s roster, including José Berríos and Victor Caratini.

    Those unforeseen absences left Puerto Rico’s roster dangerously undermanned and elicited a drastic response from the head of Puerto Rico’s Baseball Federation, José Quiles. In an interview conducted Friday, Quiles threatened to withdraw the entire team from the event if certain insurance decisions weren’t overturned.

    Sources with knowledge of the situation told Yahoo Sports that it is extremely unlikely that Puerto Rico backs out, as doing so would lead to significant, lasting sanctions from the WBSC, baseball’s global governing body. However, according to other reports, MLB commissioner Rob Manfred and high-ranking MLB Players Association officials have begun lobbying the insurance company to review an unknown number of decisions. Their involvement seems to have precipitated the overturning of some lower-profile denials, but it remains to be seen if the league and union have the sway to greenlight stars such as Correa and Lindor.

    This entire saga has thrust the World Baseball Classic’s arcane insurance policies into the spotlight. During an MLB season, all players on a team’s 40-man roster play on guaranteed contracts, meaning they get paid regardless of injury. The World Baseball Classic is a different story.

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    In order to protect MLB clubs in case of player injury, the WBC organization takes out insurance policies on the contracts of all 40-man-roster players participating in the tournament. If a player gets hurt while playing for his country, the MLB team in question receives financial compensation for any time missed. This dynamic became relevant during the 2023 tournament, when Mets and Puerto Rico reliever Edwin Díaz tore the patellar tendon in his right knee while celebrating a save in the WBC and missed the entire MLB season. Also, Astros and Venezuela second baseman José Altuve suffered a thumb fracture when he was hit by a pitch and was on the shelf for nearly two months.

    National Financial Partners handles the requests for insurance coverage on a case-by-case basis, evaluating whether a player’s injury history is “low-risk,” “moderate” or “chronic.” The “chronic” label means a higher threshold for approval and applies to any player who fits any of the following criteria, according to ESPN’s Alden Gonzalez:

    1. Spent at least 60 days on the injured list during the previous season

    2. Injured for two of their team’s final three games the previous season

    3. Underwent at least two surgeries over the course of their career

    4. Underwent surgery following the previous season

    A new provision also stipulates that players 37 or older are ineligible for coverage. That rule will likely prevent Dodgers World Series hero Miguel Rojas from suiting up for Venezuela, though it’s unclear whether he would have made the country’s final roster.

    Both Lindor (elbow surgery after the 2025 season) and Correa (multiple career surgeries) qualify as “chronic” players. In addition, their relatively large contracts likely played a significant role in NFP’s decision, making it more difficult for their insurance to get approved.

    As one person with inside knowledge explained it: “The insurance company is insuring the contract, not the player.” That’s likely why Lindor, with six years and $204.6 million left on his deal, was declined, while an oft-injured player such as Byron Buxton (three years, $45.4 million) was approved. Two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani is approved to hit in the tournament but won’t pitch, as his two elbow surgeries would’ve made it nearly impossible for him to get the necessary insurance.

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    Players who fail to get insurance have four options: (1) Don’t participate. (2) Waive insurance and risk forgoing salary in the event of injury. (3) Pay for insurance themselves. (4) Receive a waiver from their MLB club. The fourth option is rarely used, but it did occur in 2023, when a depleted version of future Hall of Famer Miguel Cabrera hoped to play for Venezuela ahead of his final MLB season. His insurance was predictably declined, but the Detroit Tigers took on the risk, agreeing to pay his salary regardless of possible injury.

    More often than not, an uninsured player simply sits out the tournament. That’s what happened in 2023 with since-retired Dodgers hurler Clayton Kershaw. The future Hall of Famer had committed to play for Team USA but changed course after his insurance was denied. His unexpected absence left the 2023 pitching staff without an ace, which played a role in both of the team’s defeats in the tournament.

    Motivated by that frustrating experience, Team USA manager Mark DeRosa adopted a more proactive approach when crafting his roster this time around. Notably, Team USA has focused its recruitment efforts on players more likely to get approved for insurance. That might be why, for instance, Mike Trout, a crucial character in 2023, is unlikely to compete in 2026. It could also help explain why Phillies first baseman Bryce Harper, despite having announced his participation on social media, has yet to be included on MLB’s page of participating players.

    Total clarity is unlikely before the official roster announcements on Thursday. Even so, Puerto Rico’s omissions aside, most of MLB’s best players are expected to appear in next month’s tournament. That includes nine of the top 10 players in MLB Network’s recently released Top 100 Player Rankings (José Ramírez is the only exception), an uptick from 2023, when seven of the top 10 appeared in the WBC.

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    It’s a reminder that despite recent rancor, the event has only continued to grow in popularity among players. The consensus top two pitchers on Earth, Tarik Skubal and Paul Skenes, are both playing for the first time. So, too, are the game’s top two hitters, Aaron Judge and Shohei Ohtani. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Juan Soto, owners of the two largest contracts in MLB history, will also suit up for the Dominican Republic.

    None of that, however, will be any solace to Puerto Rico. Lindor is a generational talent at his professional peak, one of the greatest players in the island’s long and storied baseball history. He currently ranks fifth all time in bWAR among players born on the island; the four legends ahead of him — Roberto Alomar, Iván Rodríguez, Carlos Beltrán and Roberto Clemente — are all Hall of Famers.

    The void created by Lindor’s absence in the WBC cannot be filled, leaving Puerto Rican ball fans feeling understandably aggrieved. And nobody, it seems, is at fault. In this instance, there is no obvious villain to blame. Just a sense of disappointment.

    The tournament rolls on regardless.

  • LIVE from Super Bowl LX: Lesson teams can learn from Seahawks, Patriots + Mock Draft 1.0

    Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy Forecast

    LIVE from San Francisco, Matt Harmon and Nate Tice kick off our Super Bowl week coverage with a special fantasy pod. The two look at the path the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks took to the Super Bowl and how other teams can emulate their paths next year. In the second half of the show we go through Nate Tice’s latest mock draft and do a deep dive on the skill players and their fits with certain teams.

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    (1:30) Yahoo Podcast Schedule during Super Bowl Week

    (2:45) Lessons learned from Seahawks Path to SB LX

    (17:20) Lessons learned from Patriots Path to SB LX

    (30:30) QB Mock Draft Fantasy Fits (Fernando Mendoza, Ty Simpson, Garrett Nussmeier)

    (41:30) WR Mock Draft Fantasy Fits (Carnell Tate, Makai Lemon, Jordyn Tyson, Denzel Boston)

    LIVE from San Francisco, Matt Harmon and Nate Tice kick off our Super Bowl week coverage with a special fantasy pod. The two look at the path the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks took to the Super Bowl and how other teams can emulate their paths next year. In the second half of the show we go through Nate Tice's latest mock draft and do a deep dive on the skill players and their fits with certain teams.

    LIVE from San Francisco, Matt Harmon and Nate Tice kick off our Super Bowl week coverage with a special fantasy pod. The two look at the path the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks took to the Super Bowl and how other teams can emulate their paths next year. In the second half of the show we go through Nate Tice’s latest mock draft and do a deep dive on the skill players and their fits with certain teams.

    (Jason Jung)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

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

  • Mariners reportedly acquire Cardinals All-Star Brendan Donovan in 3-team trade involving Rays

    The Seattle Mariners are reportedly acquiring All-Star infielder/outfielder Brendan Donovan from the St. Louis Cardinals in a three-team trade that also involves the Tampa Bay Rays, ESPN’s Jeff Passan reports.

    Per the New York Post’s Joel Sherman, the Mariners are sending pitching prospect Jurrangelo Cijntje to the Cardinals and third baseman Ben Williamson to the Rays in return.

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    According to Passan, St. Louis will also receive a pair of prospects, center fielder Tai Peete from Seattle and outfielder Colton Ledbetter from Tampa Bay, as well as two competitive-balance Round B picks, in the return for Donovan.

    Donovan is a former Gold Glove winner who can play multiple positions in the infield and outfield. A four-year MLB pro, he has spent his entire career with the Cardinals and made his first All-Star team last season.

    In 118 games in 2025, Donovan slashed .287/.353/.422 with 10 home runs, 50 RBI and 64 runs scored while frequently hitting leadoff. He has played 118-plus games in three of his four MLB seasons and has never played fewer than 95.

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    Donovan joins a Mariners team looking to build on its 2025 AL West championship and trip to the ALCS, in which it lost in seven games to the Toronto Blue Jays.

    [Get more Mariners news: Seattle team feed]

    The Mariners lost slugging third baseman Eugenio Suárez in free agency this winter. But Donovan will join a lineup that features All-Stars Cal Raleigh, Julio Rodríguez and Randy Arozarena and finished ninth in runs scored last season.

    Donovan could replace Suárez at third base. He offers the Mariners a versatile glove that can fill in at multiple positions, in addition to a reliable bat that can hit near the top of the order.

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    What the Cardinals, Rays are getting in the deal

    Per MLB.com, Cijntje was the No. 7 prospect in the Mariners’ system and the No. 90 prospect in all of baseball. He’s a switch pitcher who’s expected to pitch as a right-hander in the majors. It’s not clear when he’ll be ready to pitch for the Cardinals.

    Peete was drafted by the Mariners in 2023 and spent the entire 2025 season with High-A Everett, where he slashed .213/.285/.401 with 19 home runs and 25 steals. Ledbetter was the Rays’ No. 24 prospect. Also drafted in 2023, he slashed .265/.337/.378 with 7 home runs and 37 stolen bases at Double-A Montgomery in 2025.

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    Williamson, 25, split his time between the Mariners and the minor leagues last season. He played in 85 Mariners game in his first season of big-league action, slashing .253/.294/.310 with 1 home run, 21 RBI and 36 runs scored in 295 plate appearances. He could join the Rays’ lineup this season.

  • As another NFL coaching cycle lacks minority hires, Roger Goodell defends recent absence of diversity program

    SAN JOSE, Calif. — On the heels of another hiring cycle that lacked racial diversity, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said the league must continue to evaluate its systems — while not believing its recent decisions contributed to the trend.

    The NFL scheduled an accelerator program for minority coaches last May, with Goodell saying a year ago that the league remained committed to diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives even as the Trump administration discouraged them.

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    Three months later, the scheduled program was deemed “postponed.” It has yet to happen.

    The hiring cycle that followed featured the hiring of nine white head coaches (the Las Vegas Raiders cannot officially hire Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak until after the Super Bowl, but are expected to, per multiple media reports) and no Black head coaches. Tennessee Titans head coach Robert Saleh, who previously was at the New York Jets’ helm, is Lebanese American.

    Does Goodell see a connection between the accelerator program’s indefinite postponement and the hiring trend?

    “I don’t think so,” he said Monday in his State of the NFL address ahead of Super Bowl LX. “Do I think that had any impact on this hiring schedule? No. But I think long term, it’s something that we want to continue and figure out how do we use that to make sure that people understand the level of talent that’s out there, the extraordinary talent that’s out there, and how to give them the opportunities to continue their careers.

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    “And that goes for all the talent across the entire NFL and people that are not in the NFL.”

    If Kubiak’s hiring becomes official next week, as expected, 27 of the league’s 32 head coaches will be white. Three will be Black: the Houston Texans’ DeMeco Ryans, the New York Jets’ Aaron Glenn and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Todd Bowles. In addition to Saleh, Carolina Panthers head coach Dave Canales is Mexican American.

    The Fritz Pollard Alliance Foundation, which promotes diversity and equality in NFL hiring, issued a statement about the lack of diversity in this year’s cycle.

    “That outcome does not reflect the depth, breadth, or quality of talent in today’s coaching pipeline, nor does it represent meaningful progress toward the NFL’s stated commitment to fair and inclusive hiring practices,” the foundation said in a Monday statement, in part. “Progress is possible when intention is matched with accountability. We stand ready to support and advance that work moving forward.”

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    The five minority coaches expected in 2026 are a drop from seven last year and nine in 2024. Two years after seven of the league’s head coaches identified as Black, just three will this year.

    In January, the Atlanta Falcons fired Raheem Morris, who is Black, and the Miami Dolphins fired Mike McDaniel, who is biracial with a white mother and Black father. Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin, who is Black, resigned after 18 years at the club’s helm.

    The NFL player population is historically about 70% Black.

    There is increasingly an expectation that any return of the NFL accelerator program would not only include minority candidates. Some advocates for minority hiring like that minority candidates could better network with white candidates if the accelerator programs included both. Others question how effective the league can be in advocating for minority candidates.

    (Davis Long/Yahoo Sports)

    (Davis Long/Yahoo Sports)

    Goodell was asked Monday whether he is “resigned” to the fact he cannot influence hiring trends toward better including qualified minority candidates.

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    “You know me too well to say I’m resigned to something where I think we need to continue to make progress and I believe that,” he said. “I believe diversity is good for us. I think we have become a more diverse league across every platform, including coaching. But we still have more work to do. There’s got to be more steps. So we’re reevaluating everything we’re doing, including our accelerator program, including every aspect of our policies and our program to meet the challenges of today and tomorrow rather than yesterday.

    “We need to be looking at that and say: ‘OK, why did we have the results this year? What is it that we could be doing in training or education?’ And that goes for not just the candidates but also the clubs, and how we can try to continue to increase the opportunities and the outcomes.”

    While the NFL mandates inclusion of minority candidates in interview processes, its Rooney Rule policy has led to what some coach and front-office candidates have described as sham interviews.

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    The Rooney Rule mandates teams conduct at least two in-person interviews with minority and/or female candidates any time they hire a head coach, general manager or coordinator.

    Teams must interview at least one diverse candidate before hiring a quarterback coach or senior-level executive.

    Goodell defended the legitimacy of the Rooney Rule.

    “I think the Rooney Rule has been seen as a positive by our clubs by giving them an opportunity to look at a diverse set of candidates,” Goodell said. “They make the choice ultimately, but I think it has shown them the value of that to look at talent where you might not know it or you may not see it. We’re in a competitive league, people are challenged and we have 10 openings this year. Teams are trying to get the coach that they think can win.

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    “A decision that is based on being able to look at a diverse slate of candidates … only benefits the NFL, and the Rooney Rule, I think, has done that.”

  • Charles Lee apologizes for ‘foolish’ collision with star LaMelo Ball in win over Pelicans: ‘I took a play off’

    Charlotte Hornets coach Charles Lee knows this is completely on him.

    Lee collided with Hornets star LaMelo Ball during their 102-95 win over the New Orleans Pelicans on Monday, resulting in what was a scary moment near the scorer’s table. Lee and Ball slammed directly into each other head-first while trying to grab a ball that was going out of bounds, which sent Ball to the court grabbing his head. Lee looked pretty banged up, too.

    Ball went to the locker room briefly after that but ended up returning to the game.

    “I took a play off, and you’re not supposed to take any plays off, and I thought the ball was going out of bounds,” Lee said. “I was gonna save it from going into the stands, and he was going to save the ball. We went head-to-head.

    “Credit to him, he didn’t yell at me too bad. I apologized, obviously.”

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    Ball ended up finishing with a team-high 24 points and eight rebounds, and he helped the Hornets rally in the fourth quarter to grab the narrow win at the Spectrum Center. That win, their seventh straight, pushed the Hornets to 23-28 on the season.

    “Great job of him responding to a foolish coach,” Lee said.

    [Get more Hornets news: Charlotte team feed]

    Lee is in his second season leading the Hornets. It’s his first head-coaching job in the league after he spent a decade as an assistant with various teams.

    Ball has averaged 19 points and 7.6 assists this season, his sixth in the league. The Hornets selected the 24-year-old with the No. 3 pick in 2020, and he’s currently in the second year of a five-year, $203.8 million deal.

    Ball, though he made fun of Lee a little bit after the incident, said he had no hard feelings.

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    “It’s all good, though,” Ball said. “It’s all love.”

  • Super Bowl 2026: Drake Maye says his shoulder is doing well: ‘I’ll be just fine’

    SAN JOSE, Calif. — If it were late September or mid-November, or practically any other week, New England Patriots quarterback Drake Maye’s shoulder might not be such a big deal.

    But this is Super Bowl week, and any small bit of news becomes a big deal. Especially when it’s an injury issue surrounding an NFL MVP finalist at quarterback.

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    Maye hurt his shoulder in the third quarter of the AFC championship game, when he scrambled and was tackled by Denver Broncos safety Talanoa Hufanga. Maye seemed to wince and briefly reach for his shoulder. That has turned into the Zapruder film of Super Bowl week.

    Maye was asked about his shoulder, among a number of off-the-wall topics, on Monday at Super Bowl LX Opening Night, when both teams met the media to unofficially kick off the week in the Bay Area. He said his shoulder started “turning a corner” on the team flight to California on Sunday, he threw on Monday, and he is doing well.

    “Feeling great. Yeah, feeling good,” Maye said. “I look forward to getting back out there the next few days.”

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    The Patriots being tight-lipped about what’s going on with Maye’s injury has added to the mystery — and allowed the story to become bigger than it probably should have. For his part, Maye insisted there are no issues.

    “I’m feeling good,” he said. “I’ll be just fine.”

    Drake Maye of the New England Patriots meets the media during Super Bowl LX Opening Night. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

    Drake Maye of the New England Patriots meets the media during Super Bowl LX Opening Night. (Photo by Chris Graythen/Getty Images)

    (Chris Graythen via Getty Images)

    Patriots hadn’t said much about Drake Maye injury

    Nobody has indicated that Maye is in the slightest danger of missing the Super Bowl. He was listed as questionable on the initial injury report for Super Bowl LX, with an illness as well as the shoulder injury.

    On Monday, Maye expressed no concerns. He didn’t throw at any of the portions of practice that were open to the media last week, but he said his throwing on Monday went well.

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    “I threw a good bit,” he said. “I threw as much as I would in a practice and felt great. I’m looking forward to getting back out there on Wednesday and Thursday for practice again.”

    [Get more Patriots news: New England team feed]

    That’s as much information as has been shared about Maye’s injury. Last week was a reminder that Patriots coach Mike Vrabel played for Bill Belichick — because he dodged any discussion of Maye’s injury last week. When asked about his level of concern over Maye’s shoulder, he said: “Not much.”

    “No, I wouldn’t say that anybody hurt anything,” Vrabel said last week. “Everybody, including Drake, is not 100 percent.”

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    Maye, who is likely to finish second in the MVP voting behind Matthew Stafford when awards are announced at the annual NFL Honors show on Thursday, will almost definitely play Sunday. The question becomes whether he is affected at all, even if he indicated his shoulder won’t be an issue.

    Maye has had an excellent season, throwing for 4,394 yards and 31 touchdowns while leading the NFL with a 72% completion percentage and 8.9 yards per attempt. A shoulder injury might not only affect Maye’s arm strength when he passes the ball, but it could also cause him to be more conservative when it comes to running the ball. He had 450 rushing yards in the regular season, and his 65 yards rushing against the Broncos were a big factor in New England’s AFC championship game win.

    If Maye is affected, we probably won’t find that out until Sunday. It’s not like the Patriots are going to share much about it. And Maye made it sound like it wouldn’t be a big deal.

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    “I really had no doubt about being 100 percent for the game,” he said. “This is the Super Bowl, and you’ve got two weeks to prepare for it, do whatever you’ve got to do to get it right, and I’ve got confidence and feel good.”

    Maye gets his turn in the spotlight

    Opening Night for Super Bowl week is light on serious discussion about injury reports or Xs and Os and heavy on silliness. For at least a half-hour before Maye came to the podium, comedian Guillermo Rodriguez from “Jimmy Kimmel Live” was camped out in the front row. Rodriguez asked the first questions, playing off a Kimmel bit about Matt Damon.

    “He’s the man,” Maye said. “Any Pats fan, I’m a fan.”

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    The last Patriots’ quarterback to play in a Super Bowl, Tom Brady, was famously asked by a reporter from TV Azteca who was in a wedding dress if he’d marry her at one Opening Night.

    There was no wedding proposal for Maye, but he was asked about everything from the favorite cookies his wife makes (the answer was cinnamon snickerdoodles) to helping fantasy football teams next season (“Do I consider myself a QB1 in fantasy? I think I’ve got to say yes,” he said) to his superstitions. He said he puts on his left sock first, but his right shoe first, stands in the same spot for the National Anthem and eats a peanut butter and jelly sandwich before each game — unless it’s a night game. Then he goes for grilled cheese.

    “I’ve got a lot of things,” Maye realized.

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    Maye will be the second-youngest quarterback to start a Super Bowl, and the extent of his breakout was one of the big stories of the NFL season. Because he ascended to being one of the NFL’s best quarterbacks so quickly, he’s still a bit of an unknown in terms of his personality. So was Brady for his first Super Bowl. By his 10th appearance, he was internationally famous.

    Maye probably won’t be reaching Super Bowls in 20 years like Brady did over his NFL career, but he seems likely to be a face of the NFL for years to come. He happily played along with all of the wacky questions Monday and seemed to be genuinely enjoying his first huge moment in the NFL and all that comes with it.

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    “What a journey,” he said. “I hope to play in this league a long time, but I don’t take it for granted.”

  • Roger Goodell says before NFL considers investigating Giants co-owner Steve Tisch, league must ‘understand the facts’ of ties to Jeffrey Epstein

    SAN JOSE, Calif. — NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said Monday the league hasn’t begun investigating emails between New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, choosing to first “understand the facts” of the exchanges.

    Goodell was pressed multiple times by reporters about emails between Tisch and Epstein that were among 3 million documents released last week by the U.S. Department of Justice. The documents, which discussed interactions with various women, were drawn from multiple investigations into the disgraced billionaire financier, who was arrested in July of 2019 and charged with sex trafficking of minors and conspiracy to commit sex trafficking of minors. Epstein subsequently died by suicide one month later in his New York City jail cell while awaiting trial.

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    Asked if the league was probing the interactions between Tisch and Epstein and considering discipline for the Giants co-owner, Goodell said during his pre-Super Bowl news conference that the league was aware of the emails but had not yet advanced to the point of an investigation.

    “You may be getting ahead of yourself on the second part,” Goodell said of the consideration of discipline for Tisch. “We are going to look at all the facts. We are going to look at the context of those and try to understand that — we will look at how that falls under the [NFL’s personal conduct] policy. But let’s get the facts first.”

    EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ - OCTOBER 28:   New York Giants Co-Owner Steve Tisch during warms up prior to the National Football League game between the Washington Redskins and the New York Giants on October 28, 2018 at Met Life Stadium in East Rutherford, NJ.  (Photo by Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    Giants co-owner Steve Tisch said in a statement that his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein was a “brief association where we exchanged emails about adult women, and in addition, we discussed movies, philanthropy, and investments.” (Photo by Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    (Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

    Asked to clarify if that meant Tisch was under investigation, Goodell again said the NFL would first attempt to determine the “facts” and then conclude whether they warranted an investigation.

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    “I don’t even know the status of all the [DOJ’s document] release,” he said. “I know that 3 million documents came out last week. Listen, we’ll continue to follow any of the facts that come up and determine if we open an investigation based on those facts.”

    Tisch’s name appeared more than 400 times in documents from Friday’s DOJ release, some including passing social interactions between the two men and others with specific — and sometimes graphic — conversations about several women whose names were redacted in the files. The emails covered a period of time several years after Epstein had served nearly 13 months in the Palm Beach Country jail, after he pled guilty to a pair of Florida state charges, including engaging in prostitution with an underage girl.

    Included in the exchanges, Tisch asked Epstein various questions about women, including if one was a “working girl” or if another was “pro or civilian.” In one email, Epstein asks Tisch, “Did you contact the great ass fake [expletive]…” in reference to a person whose name was redacted. The Athletic was the first to report the existence of the emails after the DOJ release Friday. In response, Tisch issued a statement through the Giants, describing his relationship to Epstein as “a brief association” that he regretted.

    “We had a brief association where we exchanged emails about adult women, and in addition, we discussed movies, philanthropy, and investments,” Tisch said in the statement. “I did not take him up on any of his invitations and never went to his island. As we all know now, he was a terrible person and someone I deeply regret associating with.”

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    Goodell didn’t go into detail about how the league would determine “facts” as a guiding compass to determine if a broader investigation into Tisch would be necessary — but affirmed that the broader scope of the Epstein investigation and that an NFL club owner being drawn into a document release was reason for concern. But he pointed to the league’s personal conduct policy as being an available guardrail should the actions of team owners reflect badly on the NFL.

    “That’s why we have a personal conduct policy and [the league] will look into the facts,” Goodell said.

    In the released documents, Tisch offered Epstein tickets to Giants games, while Epstein offered to host Epstein at his private island in the Caribbean. Epstein also had emails with women who were seeking to associate with Tisch based on his experience as a producer in Hollywood. Tisch has producer credits on multiple critically acclaimed or cult hit movies over several decades, including “Risky Business,” “Forrest Gump,” “American History X,” “The Long Kiss Goodnight,” and “The Pursuit of Happyness.”

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    It’s unclear if Tisch’s communications with Epstein constitute an element of a personal conduct violation, although the league’s language for determining an infraction is largely in the hands of Goodell and the influence of other franchise owners. The eight-page personal conduct policy reads in part:

    “Everyone who is part of the league must refrain from ‘conduct detrimental to the integrity of and public confidence in’ the NFL. It is not enough simply to avoid being found guilty of a crime in a court of law. We are all held to a higher standard and must conduct ourselves in a way that is responsible, promotes the values of the NFL, and is lawful.”

    Regarding team owners, members of franchise management and members of the league office, it adds, “Ownership and club or league management have traditionally been held to a higher standard and will be subject to more significant discipline when violations of the Personal Conduct Policy occur.”

    The most notable punishments incurred under the personal conduct policy were workplace misconduct investigations into a pair of club owners: The Washington Commanders’ Dan Snyder and the Carolina Panthers’ Jerry Richardson. After each was found to have committed infractions of the policy, Snyder was fined $60 million by the NFL, while Richardson was docked $2.75 million. Both eventually sold their teams.

  • Stefon Diggs reflects on coming up short with Bills ahead of his first career Super Bowl with Patriots: ‘Wish things were different’

    The Buffalo Bills traded to acquire ascending wide receiver Stefon Diggs from the Minnesota Vikings ahead of the 2020 season, hoping that he was the missing piece to unlock quarterback Josh Allen’s potential and propel the franchise to its first Super Bowl championship.

    Diggs delivered on a lot of that promise. But the Bills ultimately came up short.

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    In his first season in Buffalo, Diggs went from a no-time Pro Bowler to a first-team All-Pro selection while leading the league in receptions and receiving yards. It was the first of four straight Pro Bowl selections and two All-Pro teams in three years for Diggs.

    And he indeed, helped Allen unlock his NFL potential. Allen went from completing a dismal 58.8% of his passes in his second NFL season to 69.2% in his first season playing with Diggs, a remarkable jump in accuracy that earned him his first Pro Bowl nod and set him on his track to win NFL MVP last season.

    As he prepares to play in the Super Bowl for the rival Patriots, Stefon Diggs maintains his love for Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills.

    As he prepares to play in the Super Bowl for the rival Patriots, Stefon Diggs maintains his love for Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills.

    (Chris Graythen via Getty Images)

    The Bills, meanwhile, made the jump from wild-card hopefuls to beasts of the AFC East and perennial Super Bowl contenders. Buffalo’s offense was a juggernaut, and there were few teams that could stand in the Bills’ way. But there was one.

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    The Kansas City Chiefs were the roadblock the Bills could never barrel through, and Buffalo traded Diggs to the Houston Texans ahead of the 2024 season, having failed to advance to a Super Bowl during the Allen era.

    One injury-shortened season in Houston later, and Diggs joined the rival New England Patriots as a free agent, facing a similar task as he did in Buffalo: help a young quarterback in Drake Maye develop as his true No. 1 target.

    On Sunday, Diggs and the Patriots will play in the Super Bowl. Allen and the Bills — if they can stomach it — will once again watch the Super Bowl from home.

    Diggs: ‘Parts of me wish things were different’

    On Monday, during Super Bowl Opening Night, Diggs reflected on his time with the Bills while speaking with media. There was no bitterness and no anger — only love for Buffalo and Allen and regret that they couldn’t get over the hump together.

    “Listen. I love y’all,” Diggs said of Buffalo. “I know I’m far gone, but I do miss y’all. I have a great relationship with y’all. Keep hanging your hat on that quarterback. That quarterback is a Hall of Fame quarterback.

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    “Parts of me wish things were different. I’ve got a lot of love and respect for that team.”

    Diggs then invoked his former Bills teammate Gabriel Davis, who returned to Buffalo in 2025 after a single season with the Jacksonville Jaguars.

    “Even when Gabe Davis went back, I was talking to Gabe, I was like ‘look at you go,’” Diggs continued. “Y’all getting the band back together? I said, ‘Where’s Cole Beasley at?’”

    Crushing defeat in Buffalo

    While Diggs prepares for the Super Bowl, Allen and the Bills are coming off a playoff loss that by all accounts was devastating.

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    For the first time since ascending to contention, the Bills entered the postseason without the boogeyman Chiefs standing in their way. Thanks to Diggs’ Patriots, they weren’t a division winner with a home path in the playoffs. But many believed this to be the Bills’ best shot at getting to that first elusive Super Bowl of the Allen era.

    Instead, they came up short on the road against the Denver Broncos in the divisional round in what was arguably the worst game of Allen’s career.

    Tears of anguish for Allen, joy for Diggs

    It was a crushing defeat of which the Bills couldn’t escape the emotion in their postgame media availability. Allen fought back tears at the podium on the heels of the 33-30 loss in which he committed four turnovers.

    “Just missed opportunities throughout the game,” Allen said when asked about his emotions. “It’s been a long season. I hate how it ended. And it’s gonna stick with me for a long time.”

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    One week later, Diggs’ Patriots beat those same Broncos in frigid conditions at that same Mile High Stadium to earn a trip to the Super Bowl. Contrast Allen’s emotions with those of Diggs, who also shed tears in the immediate aftermath of that AFC championship game win.

    “It made it all worth it, man. All the hard work. We’ve got one more,” Diggs said, fighting back tears. “I just want to rejoice and take this moment in, and just be thankful for God. It’s hard, man.

    “They was calling me washed. Said I ain’t have it no more, man. I just wanted to prove it to myself. I am who I say I am.”

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    Diggs’ 2025 season journey is not over. He’s got one more game to achieve the ultimate goal and will try to do so with a quarterback in Maye whom he clearly respects and holds in esteem as he does Allen.

    And if the Patriots pull off a win over the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday, Diggs can close his career whenever he chooses to do so without regret over what might have been.

    But nothing will take away his love for Buffalo. And as long as they’re not standing in his way, it sounds like he’s rooting for Allen and the Bills to get that Super Bowl ring before Allen’s done.

  • Mariners finally make their big offseason move, bolster infield by acquiring Brendan Donovan from Cardinals

    With a little help from a familiar facilitator, the Seattle Mariners finally executed the deal they’d been pursuing all winter on Monday, acquiring Brendan Donovan from the St. Louis Cardinals. The deal is a three-way swap including the Tampa Bay Rays, Seattle’s most frequent trade partner during president of baseball operations Jerry Dipoto’s decade-long tenure leading the front office. After months of reports indicating Seattle’s interest in Donovan — and uncertainty about whether the Cardinals would actually part with him as part of their dramatic offseason of offloading — it’s fitting that the Rays’ surprise involvement helped push this deal across the finish line.

    Here’s the breakdown:

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    • Mariners receive: INF/OF Brendan Donovan (from Cardinals)

    • Cardinals receive: RHP Jurrangelo Cijntje (from Mariners), OF Tai Peete (from Mariners), OF Colton Ledbetter (from Rays), Competitive Balance Round B Pick (currently No. 68, from Mariners), Competitive Balance Round B Pick (currently No. 72, from Rays)

    • Rays receive: INF Ben Williamson (from Mariners)

    All offseason, Donovan was heavily rumored to be at the top of the Mariners’ wish list as they sought to replenish both their infield and their lineup in the wake of Jorge Polanco and Eugenio Suarez both departing in free agency. Re-signing Josh Naylor in November to a five-year deal solidified first base and provided a middle-of-the-order bat, but enough uncertainty remained at second and third base that another infield addition felt necessary. Given Donovan’s experience at both positions, his above-average, left-handed bat and his two years of team control remaining, the 29-year-old surfaced as the ideal candidate for the Mariners, especially considering their excellent farm system to deal from. Still, Seattle had been awfully, uncharacteristically quiet in the months since retaining Naylor, with their only major additions a trade for lefty reliever Jose A. Ferrer and a one-year deal for platoon slugger Rob Refsnyder.

    With spring training approaching, it seemed increasingly likely that Seattle would entrust its talented yet unproven young players — Cole Young, Ben Williamson, top prospect Colt Emerson — with multiple infield spots, a risky strategy for a team with World Series ambitions. Then Dipoto explicitly stated at the team’s fan fest over the weekend that the club was hoping to add one more piece to the major-league roster. There’s always risk in front office officials publicly promising such additions, if even vaguely, but evidently Dipoto was confident enough about a Donovan deal to give an obvious hint to the fan base.

    [Get more Seattle news: Mariners team feed

    Sure enough, Donovan now joins the Mariners after eight years in the Cardinals organization. Born in Germany while his father, a colonel in the U.S. Army, was stationed overseas, Donovan bounced around a lot growing up but eventually settled in Alabama, where he played in high school and at the University of South Alabama. He was relatively unheralded as an amateur but played his way onto the prospect radar after joining the Cardinals as a seventh-round draft pick in 2018. In 2021, he hit .304/.399/.455 across three levels, reaching Triple-A to put himself in position for an early call-up the following season. He rode that momentum to a terrific debut campaign in 2022, bursting on the scene as a crucial cog for the 93-win, NL Central champion Cardinals. His .394 on-base percentage was the fifth-highest mark by a rookie with at least 450 plate appearances this century — behind only the Cooperstown-bound quartet of Aaron Judge, Juan Soto, Albert Pujols and Mike Trout — and he finished third in NL Rookie of the Year voting.

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    In the three years since then, although he hasn’t replicated the lofty OBP of his debut campaign, Donovan has continued to reach base at an above-average clip, thanks to his advanced plate discipline and outstanding contact skills: Among 103 hitters with at least 1,500 plate appearances the past three seasons, Donovan’s .351 OBP ranks 24th, and his 13.1% strikeout rate ranks seventh-lowest. That skill set makes him an intriguing candidate to lead off for Seattle, at least against right-handers, as a logical table-setter ahead of sluggers Cal Raleigh, Julio Rodriguez, Naylor and Randy Arozarena.

    To be fair, Donovan also has his limitations with the bat. His modest raw power has translated to just 40 home runs in 492 career games, and his hard-hit rates are unremarkable. He has also consistently struggled against southpaws, with a .651 OPS against lefties compared to a .812 mark vs. right-handers. On the whole, Donovan’s below-average pop and sharp platoon splits have capped his offensive ceiling at more good than great.

    But that steady output at the plate has shined in tandem with his varied defensive versatility, which has defined Donovan for essentially his entire career. After starting nearly every game in left field as a freshman at South Alabama in 2016, Donovan has spent the past decade moving around the diamond and proving proficient at multiple spots. As a rookie, he started games at every position except catcher and center field, earning the first-ever utility Gold Glove in the NL.

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    More recently, the vast majority of Donovan’s playing time has come at second base and left field. In Seattle, the focus will be on second and third, a position Donovan hasn’t played as much due to Nolan Arenado’s presence in St. Louis. But assuming the Mariners are still confident in Donovan’s ability to man the hot corner, a new genre of questions emerge regarding the other infielders on the Mariners’ depth chart. Williamson’s inclusion in this deal removes one name from the equation, but adding Donovan sets up a competition in spring training between the 22-year-old Young and the 20-year-old Emerson for the other starting infield spot, with Naylor at first base and J.P. Crawford at shortstop.

    Having made his major-league debut last summer, Young would seem to have a leg up in such a contest, and the Mariners think highly of his ability to become an above-average starter at the keystone. But Emerson — a natural shortstop who has also seen time at third on his meteoric rise through the minors — is a consensus top-10 prospect in all of MLB and might have the kind of talent to force the issue. If he explodes in spring and wins the third-base job, that would likely send Young to Triple-A to keep getting every-day at-bats while Donovan stays at second. Alternatively, Emerson looks like the heir apparent to Crawford at shortstop, with Crawford slated to hit free agency after this season. So while the Mariners are likely hoping Emerson and Young will contribute in 2026, bringing in Donovan dramatically lessens the urgency for both of them to do so right away.

    Williamson, meanwhile, departs Seattle’s crowded infield picture to join a new-look Rays roster that has added plenty of fresh faces this offseason. Tampa Bay appears to be in a transition of sorts. If not a full-blown rebuild, it’s at least an acknowledgment that the four other AL East teams are loading up in a way that makes competing in the short-term unlikely for the Rays, leading them to prioritize long-term assets.

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    While Williamson’s bat is still a work in progress after being rushed to the majors to fill Seattle’s third-base need, he has garnered a reputation as a fantastic infield defender. Interestingly, that has mostly been earned at third base, a position that would seem to be blocked in Tampa by Junior Caminero. Instead, Williamson will likely see time at second base as a right-handed complement to the recently acquired Gavin Lux. While the acquisition cost wasn’t outlandish, the Rays must have had a favorable view of Williamson to have even bothered wiggling their way into this deal. As such, his development in Tampa will be worth monitoring.

    For the Cardinals, adding a third team to the deal was a nifty way to maximize the return for a player they weren’t necessarily intent on dealing before Opening Day. Slated to make just $5.8 million this season and under team control for 2027 as well, Donovan represented a much more valuable trade chip than high-paid veterans such as Sonny Gray, Willson Contreras and Nolan Arenado, all of whom were moved for more middling returns as St. Louis prioritized clearing their salaries and opening playing time for young players. Donovan, meanwhile, could’ve stayed put until the deadline if the Cardinals were unsatisfied with offers. But ultimately, Seattle and Tampa Bay combined to form a worthwhile package, culminating in the latest future-focused transaction from new Cardinals president of baseball operations Chaim Bloom.

    In the return for St. Louis, Cijtnje is the prize — and a fascinating one at that. Not 23 until May, Cijtnje has been playing in front of big audiences for years, having starred for Team Curacao at the 2016 Little League World Series. It was in Williamsport that he first demonstrated his special skill of switch-pitching, a remarkable display of ambidextrousness that gained notoriety as he got older and thrived at the high school and collegiate levels. The Mariners selected him with the 15th pick in 2024 out of Mississippi State University and allowed him to keep switch-pitching during his first full professional season in 2025. But Cijtnje has always projected far more favorably from the right side, and when Seattle announced Cijtnje as a non-roster invite to spring training last week, he was labeled as a right-hander only.

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    The Cardinals also tabbed him as such when announcing the trade on Monday but left open the possibility that he might continue throwing from both sides. At just 5-foot-11, Cijtnje doesn’t have the typical frame of a rotation workhorse, but he’s strong and sturdy, and his stuff resembles that of an impact starter, with high-90s velocity and an excellent slider to go with a rapidly improving changeup. He pitched well in Double-A last season, so it’s not out of the question that Cijtnje could pitch his way to the majors at some point in 2026 if things continue to click.

    Peete and Ledbetter are two outfielders with enticing pedigrees and a lot to prove in 2026. Peete was the 30th pick in 2023 as one of the youngest players in his high school class. He’s a tremendous athlete who has transitioned to the outfield after being drafted as a shortstop and could develop into a center fielder with plus power, but his hit tool needs serious refining for that outcome to manifest at the highest level. Ledbetter was also drafted early in 2023 (55th overall) after starring at Mississippi State, where he was Cijtnje’s teammate. What was lauded as an advanced hit-power combination as an amateur has yet to fully translate to pro ball, but he reached Double-A last year and could find a new gear with a change of scenery.

    Finally, adding not one but two picks in this summer’s draft is a great way for St. Louis to continue restocking its ascendent farm system. As the draft order stands now — and it might change slightly once the final two free agents with qualifying offers attached (Framber Valdez and Zac Gallen) sign — the Cardinals own six picks in the top-100: Nos. 13, 32, 50, 68, 72 and 86. That haul will equate to one of the largest bonus pools of any team, which will afford St. Louis’ amateur scouting department the flexibility to reel in another loaded wave of exciting young talent this summer.