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NFL COACHING CAROUSEL

Raiders Hire Klint Kubiak as Head Coach: Super Bowl Architect Leaves Seattle to Resurrect Las Vegas With Fernando Mendoza and the No. 1 Pick

Posted: February 1, 2026, 12:49 PM ET

Klint Kubiak, Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator, during the 2025 NFL season

Klint Kubiak leaves Seattle for Las Vegas after orchestrating the Seahawks' run to Super Bowl LX | Photo: Seattle Seahawks

Seattle Seahawks

Seahawks (14-3)

Las Vegas Raiders

Raiders (3-14)

THE HIRE: Klint Kubiak, 38, agrees to become Raiders' fourth head coach in four seasons after leading Seahawks to Super Bowl LX appearance

THE INHERITANCE: No. 1 overall pick in 2026 NFL Draft, Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza expected to be the selection

The Las Vegas Raiders have found their man. After weeks of interviews, second-guessing, and ownership deliberation involving minority owner Tom Brady, the Raiders have agreed to hire Seattle Seahawks offensive coordinator Klint Kubiak as their next head coach, according to multiple reports. The deal cannot be officially finalized until after Super Bowl LX on February 8th, but the framework is in place. Kubiak, 38, will become the fourth head coach in Las Vegas in four years, inheriting a franchise that finished 3-14 and secured the No. 1 overall pick in the upcoming NFL Draft. It's a massive rebuilding job, but Kubiak also inherits something that makes the gig infinitely more attractive than it appeared just months ago: the consensus top prospect in the draft, Indiana quarterback and Heisman Trophy winner Fernando Mendoza.

This is a hire that makes sense on multiple levels, and it represents the Raiders pivoting from the disastrous Pete Carroll experiment toward a young, offensive-minded coach who just helped engineer one of the most surprising Super Bowl runs in recent memory. Kubiak's 2025 Seahawks went 14-3, earned the NFC's top seed, knocked off the San Francisco 49ers and Los Angeles Rams in the playoffs, and are now preparing to face the New England Patriots on the biggest stage in sports. He won't be on Seattle's sideline for that game, at least not in spirit, because his mind will already be in Las Vegas, plotting how to transform one of the league's most dysfunctional franchises into something resembling competence.

The Kubiak Name: A Coaching Dynasty Takes Another Step

Klint Alexander Kubiak was born into football royalty. His father, Gary Kubiak, is one of the most accomplished offensive minds in NFL history. The elder Kubiak served as offensive coordinator for the Denver Broncos teams that won back-to-back Super Bowls with John Elway in the late 1990s, then won Super Bowl 50 as Denver's head coach in 2015. Gary Kubiak's coaching tree has produced an absurd number of current NFL head coaches: Mike McDaniel, Kyle Shanahan, Robert Saleh, Matt LaFleur, Vance Joseph, and Brian Callahan all worked under him at various points. Now his son joins that legacy, not as a branch of someone else's tree, but as the trunk of his own.

Here's what makes the Kubiak family story even more remarkable: Klint's younger brother, Klay, is currently the offensive coordinator of the San Francisco 49ers. Yes, that means two brothers called plays against each other in the NFC West this season, with Klint's Seahawks winning the division and the No. 1 seed over Klay's Niners. Imagine the Thanksgiving dinner conversations in the Kubiak household. "Hey Klay, remember when my offense dropped 35 on your defense in Week 14?" The brothers coached together twice before: in Gary's final season as Denver's head coach in 2016, and then again under their father in Minnesota from 2019 to 2020. When Klint was promoted to Vikings offensive coordinator in 2021, he literally replaced his own father, who retired from coaching. Football isn't just a job for the Kubiaks. It's the family business.

The Winding Road to Las Vegas

Kubiak's path to becoming a head coach wasn't a straight line. After his stint as Vikings offensive coordinator in 2021 didn't go as planned, with Minnesota finishing 8-9 and coach Mike Zimmer getting fired, Kubiak took a step back. He returned to Denver in 2022 as a senior offensive assistant, then joined the San Francisco 49ers in 2023 as their offensive passing game specialist. That year in the Bay Area was transformational. Working alongside Kyle Shanahan, Kubiak played a pivotal role in an offense that ranked second in total yards, first in red zone touchdown percentage, and produced an NFL-best passer rating from Brock Purdy. The 49ers reached Super Bowl LVIII that season, losing to Kansas City in overtime, but Kubiak's stock soared.

From San Francisco, Kubiak jumped to the New Orleans Saints as their offensive coordinator in 2024. It was a rough year. The Saints started hot, scoring 91 points in their first two games, but injuries decimated the offense. New Orleans used three different starting quarterbacks and limped to another disappointing finish. Kubiak needed a fresh start, and he got one when the Seattle Seahawks hired him as their offensive coordinator on January 26, 2025. What happened next nobody could have predicted. Seattle, picked by many to finish last in the NFC West behind San Francisco, LA, and Arizona, caught fire immediately. Sam Darnold, the much-maligned former Jets first-round pick who had signed with Seattle as a free agent, played the best football of his career under Kubiak's guidance. Wide receiver Jaxon Smith-Njigba led the entire NFL with 1,793 receiving yards. The Seahawks finished ranked third in points per game (28.4) and eighth in total yards (351.4). They won 14 games, earned the top seed, and now sit one win away from a championship.

The Pete Carroll Disaster: How Las Vegas Hit Rock Bottom

To understand why the Raiders job is both appealing and terrifying, you need to understand what went wrong with Pete Carroll. Last January, Las Vegas made a splashy hire, bringing in the 74-year-old Super Bowl-winning coach who had spent 14 seasons building the Seahawks into perennial contenders. Carroll, who had taken a year off after his Seattle tenure ended, was supposed to bring credibility and stability to a franchise that desperately needed both. Instead, he presided over one of the most disastrous single-season implosions in NFL history.

The Raiders went 3-14, their worst record since 1962. They lost 11 consecutive games to close the season, the longest single-season losing streak in franchise history. They were shut out twice. They lost by double digits nine times. Quarterback Geno Smith, who Carroll had traded for from Seattle, threw a league-high 17 interceptions. Running back Ashton Jeanty, the sixth overall pick in the 2025 draft, had an unproductive and disappointing rookie season. Carroll fired offensive coordinator Chip Kelly and special teams coordinator Tom McMahon within a span of 16 days in November. Reports emerged of "lack of cohesion in the coaching offices" and disharmony between Carroll and his coordinators. It was ugly, and by January 2026, owner Mark Davis had seen enough. Carroll was fired on the first day of the new league year, just 17 games into his three-year contract.

The Tom Brady Factor: A Minority Owner With Maximum Influence

One of the most fascinating subplots of the Raiders' coaching search has been the involvement of minority owner Tom Brady. The seven-time Super Bowl champion purchased a stake in the team in 2023 and has gradually taken on a larger role in franchise operations. When Carroll was fired, Davis made clear that Brady would be "a key voice" in the search for a replacement. Brady was reportedly present for multiple candidate interviews and flew to Indianapolis to watch the national championship game alongside Davis and general manager John Spytek, specifically to scout Fernando Mendoza. His fingerprints are all over this hire.

What does Brady see in Kubiak? Probably someone who reminds him of the offensive architects he thrived under during his playing career. Kubiak runs a West Coast-based system with modern concepts, emphasizing quarterback decision-making, timing routes, and an efficient passing attack. It's the kind of system that Brady himself mastered in New England and Tampa Bay. Brady has also been outspoken about the importance of building around a franchise quarterback, and the Raiders are about to draft one. Having an offensive-minded head coach who can develop Fernando Mendoza aligns perfectly with Brady's vision for the franchise.

Fernando Mendoza: The Reason This Job Is Suddenly Attractive

Let's be honest about something: the Raiders job would be a nightmare for most coaches. Three head coaches in three years. A 3-14 record. A franchise that has won exactly one playoff game since 2002. An owner who fires coaches on a whim. An unstable front office. This is not a destination job by any traditional measure. But there's one thing that changes the calculus entirely: the No. 1 overall pick and the quarterback who's going to be taken with it. Fernando Mendoza isn't just another prospect. He's a generational talent, a 6-foot-5, 225-pound signal-caller who led Indiana to an undefeated 16-0 season and the College Football Playoff national championship while winning the Heisman Trophy.

Mendoza's numbers are staggering. He completed 72% of his passes for 3,535 yards and 41 touchdowns. He led the Hoosiers to a 27-21 victory over Miami in the national title game, cementing his status as the consensus top pick. If he goes first overall to Las Vegas, he'll join Cam Newton (2010) and Joe Burrow (2019) as the only players to win the Heisman Trophy and national championship in the same season before being selected with the first pick. NFL Network's Daniel Jeremiah has been unequivocal about Mendoza's value: "It's irrelevant what other teams offer in trade. The Raiders are not going to pass up an opportunity to get Mendoza." For Kubiak, that means inheriting a franchise quarterback on a rookie contract, the foundation on which modern dynasties are built.

The Offensive Overhaul: Turning the League's Worst Offense into Something Functional

The Raiders' offense under Pete Carroll was historically bad. They ranked dead last in total offense at just 4,168 yards, among the bottom five in passing, and dead last in rushing. That's what happens when your offensive coordinator gets fired midseason, your quarterback throws 17 picks, and your rookie running back can't find his footing. Kubiak's task is monumental: take an offense that couldn't do anything right and transform it into something resembling the units he's built in Seattle, San Francisco, and elsewhere. The good news is that he's done it before. When Kubiak took over as Seahawks offensive coordinator, that unit jumped from middling to elite in a single season. Sam Darnold went from "failed draft bust" to "legitimate franchise quarterback" under his tutelage.

What can Raiders fans expect from a Kubiak offense? Based on his work in Seattle, they can expect a system that emphasizes timing, ball placement, and getting playmakers in space. Jaxon Smith-Njigba's league-leading receiving season wasn't an accident. Kubiak schemed him open consistently, finding mismatches and exploiting defensive weaknesses. He'll need to do the same with whatever weapons the Raiders have, while installing an entirely new system from scratch. With Mendoza at quarterback, Kubiak will have a mobile, intelligent passer who can make all the throws. The offensive line is a mess, the running game is non-existent, and the receiving corps is thin. But at least the most important position on the field will be set for the next decade.

The Other Candidates: Why the Raiders Chose Kubiak

The Raiders' coaching search was extensive. They interviewed Ejiro Evero, the Carolina Panthers defensive coordinator and former Broncos DC. They spoke with Davis Webb, the Broncos' passing game coordinator, who withdrew his name from consideration late in the process. They had interest in Joe Brady, who ended up becoming the Buffalo Bills' head coach. Kevin Stefanski, Jeff Hafley, and Jesse Minter were all linked to the job before accepting positions elsewhere. Kubiak emerged as the clear favorite after his second interview, which reportedly included a whiteboard session titled "Welcome to Vegas." By the time the Super Bowl rolls around, the paperwork will be ready to sign.

Why Kubiak over the others? Age and offensive acumen played a role. At 38, Kubiak is young enough to grow with a franchise while experienced enough to command respect. His family name carries weight in NFL circles. His performance in Seattle this season has been exceptional, and the contrast between what he achieved with the Seahawks and what Pete Carroll did with the Raiders couldn't be starker. Kubiak represents the future. Carroll represented the past. For a franchise desperately trying to build something sustainable, the choice was obvious.

The Challenge Ahead: Can Anyone Fix the Raiders?

Let's not sugarcoat this: the Las Vegas Raiders are a mess. They've had four head coaches in four years (Jon Gruden resigned, Josh McDaniels was fired midseason, Pete Carroll was fired after one year, and now Kubiak). Their best offensive player is arguably Ashton Jeanty, a rookie running back who struggled mightily. Their defense gave up points in bunches. Their salary cap situation is complicated. Their draft history is checkered. They play in a division with the Kansas City Chiefs, still the standard-bearers in the AFC, along with a Chargers team that's loaded with talent and a Broncos team on the rise. Nothing about this job is easy.

But that's also why Kubiak's willingness to take the job is significant. He could have waited another year, returned to Seattle for another crack at a Super Bowl, and entered next year's coaching cycle with even more leverage. Instead, he's betting on himself and on Fernando Mendoza. He's betting that he can do in Las Vegas what he did in Seattle: take a team that others counted out and turn them into contenders. He's betting that his system, his family's legacy, and his ability to develop quarterbacks will translate to a franchise that desperately needs all three. It's a high-risk, high-reward proposition. If he fails, he'll be another name on the Raiders' ever-growing list of coaching casualties. If he succeeds, he'll be remembered as the man who finally brought stability to one of the NFL's most chaotic organizations.

The Bottom Line

Klint Kubiak is leaving the Super Bowl stage to take on the NFL's ultimate reclamation project. He's leaving a 14-3 team for a 3-14 team. He's leaving Sam Darnold, who resurrected his career in Seattle, to build a new offense around Fernando Mendoza, who hasn't taken a snap in the NFL. He's leaving a franchise that's one win from a championship to join a franchise that hasn't won a playoff game in over two decades. It's either the gutsiest move of the 2026 coaching carousel or the most foolhardy, depending on your perspective. But Kubiak has seen what patience and proper quarterback development can do. He watched his father win a Super Bowl in Denver. He watched his brother build a successful offense in San Francisco. He turned a broken-down journeyman into a Pro Bowl-caliber player in Seattle. If anyone can fix the Raiders, it might be the 38-year-old son of a Super Bowl champion who learned the game at his father's knee and proved in one magical season that he's ready to run his own show. Las Vegas is rolling the dice on Klint Kubiak. Given what he's accomplished, it might be the smartest gamble they've ever made.


NBA TRADE DEADLINE

Warriors Emerge as Frontrunners for Giannis Trade: Inside Golden State's Dream of Pairing Antetokounmpo With Curry and the All-Star Party That Hinted at It All

Posted: January 30, 2026, 10:43 AM ET

Stephen Curry and Giannis Antetokounmpo together during the 2019 NBA All-Star Game in Charlotte

Stephen Curry and Giannis Antetokounmpo have shared mutual admiration for years, and now a trade could finally unite them | Photo: Garrett Ellwood / NBA Photos

Golden State Warriors

Warriors (26-22)

Milwaukee Bucks

Bucks (18-26)

THE REPORT: ESPN's Shams Charania reports Giannis is "ready for a new home" and the Bucks are "starting to listen" to trade offers ahead of Feb. 5 deadline

THE PACKAGE: Warriors offering Jimmy Butler (season-ending ACL), Jonathan Kuminga, and up to 4 first-round picks (2026, 2028, 2030, 2032)

For nearly a decade, this has been the dream. Warriors CEO Joe Lacob has reportedly fantasized about pairing Giannis Antetokounmpo with Stephen Curry since long before anyone thought it was possible. The idea seemed absurd, a pipe dream cooked up in the Bay Area fog. Giannis was a Buck for life. He signed the supermax. He won the championship in 2021 with one of the most dominant Finals performances in NBA history. He wasn't going anywhere. And yet, here we are. On January 28, 2026, ESPN's Shams Charania dropped a bombshell that sent shockwaves through the basketball world: Giannis Antetokounmpo is "ready for a new home," and the Milwaukee Bucks are finally, after years of insisting otherwise, "starting to listen" to trade offers. The Warriors were one of four teams Charania specifically named as having the inside track. This isn't speculation anymore. This is real.

Here's the thing about this story that makes it different from every other Giannis trade rumor you've heard over the years: there are receipts. Concrete, tangible evidence that Giannis and the Warriors have been circling each other for a long time. And the most telling piece of evidence happened less than a year ago, during All-Star Weekend in San Francisco, when the Greek Freak showed up to a party that absolutely nobody expected him to attend.

The All-Star Party That Started It All

February 16, 2025. The 2025 NBA All-Star Game had just wrapped up in San Francisco, with Steph Curry winning MVP honors after drilling a half-court shot and putting on a show for his home crowd. That night, Curry hosted an exclusive afterparty at Club Thirty inside Splash at Thrive City, the plaza adjacent to Chase Center. It was a Gentleman's Cut bourbon tasting party, an intimate gathering celebrating Curry's bourbon brand partnership with a Napa Valley winemaker. The guest list was predictably Warriors-heavy: Draymond Green was there, Ayesha Curry, Cameron Brink, Sabrina Ionescu, members of the Golden State Valkyries. DJ D-Nice spun. Bay Area legend Too $hort performed. It was a Warriors family affair. And then, towering above everyone else in the room at nearly seven feet tall, there was one very notable, very unexpected guest: Giannis Antetokounmpo.

According to Sam Amick's reporting, Giannis wasn't just a casual drop-by. His wife and daughters were there too. Even more intriguing, Bucks co-owner Michael D. Fascitelli was spotted at the party alongside Giannis. An NBA superstar bringing his family and one of his team's owners to a Warriors-centric event during All-Star Weekend isn't normal behavior. It raised eyebrows immediately. Why was Giannis, of all people, the only non-Warrior player at Steph Curry's bourbon party? The speculation was immediate and intense: was this a social visit, or was it something more?

A Friendship Built on Mutual Admiration

The Giannis-Curry connection goes deeper than one party. Both superstars are represented by the same agency, Octagon, which means their business circles overlap constantly. But beyond the business relationship, there's genuine personal respect. Earlier this season, Giannis did a Q&A session on X and fans peppered him with questions about the all-time greats. When asked to rank his top five players ever, Giannis didn't hesitate: "1. Steph. 2. MJ. 3. Kobe. 4. KD. 5. Bron." Steph Curry at the top of the list. Ahead of Michael Jordan. Ahead of LeBron. That's not something you say unless you truly believe it, or unless you're sending a message.

Giannis also called Curry and Damian Lillard the "greatest shooters of all time" during that same session. He compared Curry favorably to Magic Johnson and Isiah Thomas. The admiration has been building for years, expressed publicly and privately, in interviews and on social media. And it's mutual. Curry has consistently praised Giannis as one of the most dominant players in the league. The respect between these two isn't manufactured for trade leverage. It's real.

The Warriors' Trade Package: Going All-In

According to multiple reports, the Warriors have contacted the Bucks in the past week and made their intentions crystal clear. They want Giannis Antetokounmpo, and they're willing to mortgage everything to get him. ESPN's Anthony Slater reported that Golden State has expressed "firm interest" and a willingness to put a "substantial offer" on the table regardless of Giannis's current calf strain and uncertain return timeline. Sports Illustrated's Chris Mannix confirmed that the Warriors have told Milwaukee they're prepared to send out Jimmy Butler, Jonathan Kuminga, and "a cache of draft picks" if the Bucks are ready to deal.

Let's break down what that package actually looks like. The Warriors can offer up to four first-round picks: 2026 unprotected, 2028 unprotected, 2030 (top-20 protected due to the Jordan Poole for Chris Paul trade with Washington), and 2032 unprotected. Those picks could become extremely valuable once Curry's career winds down and Golden State potentially enters a rebuilding phase. Milwaukee would essentially be betting on the Warriors' future decline, which isn't an unreasonable bet to make when you're looking at a 37-year-old point guard as the franchise cornerstone.

On the player side, Jonathan Kuminga has been a point of interest for Milwaukee dating back to last summer. The 22-year-old forward has upside as a two-way wing, even though his relationship with the Warriors has soured this season. Kuminga has been benched since November and is reportedly demanding a trade. For Milwaukee, he represents a young piece to build around, a controllable contract, and a potential star-in-waiting. the former star is trickier. He tore his ACL on January 16 during a game against the Heat and is out for the season. His value as a trade chip is limited, but his $48 million expiring contract works for salary matching purposes. Milwaukee might view him as a reclamation project for next season or simply a necessary piece to make the money work.

Why the Warriors Are the Frontrunners

Multiple league sources and analysts have identified Golden State as the team best positioned to win the Giannis sweepstakes. ESPN's Brian Windhorst said it plainly on NBA Today: "The Golden State Warriors are a team that immediately rises to the top of the list. As far as the teams that can make a straight up trade with the Bucks, the Warriors hold all their future draft assets. They can trade all of them." Kevin O'Connor echoed that sentiment, calling Golden State the "frontrunner" and noting that there's "mutual interest" between Giannis and the Warriors organization.

The timing favors Golden State too. Slater's reporting emphasized that "the quicker Milwaukee acts, league executives believe, the better chance Golden State has to win the bidding war." The Knicks have more attractive young players. The Heat have better mid-prime talent. But both of those teams would need more time to construct competitive offers. The Warriors are ready to deal right now, with a package already assembled and leadership that has been preparing for this moment for years. Joe Lacob didn't dream about Giannis in a Warriors jersey just to let the opportunity slip away when it finally materialized.

Milwaukee's Freefall: Why the Bucks Are Finally Listening

The Bucks are in freefall. At 18-26, they sit 11th in the Eastern Conference, three games out of the play-in tournament with the February 5 trade deadline looming. They've lost six of their last seven games. They just got beat by the Washington Wizards, the worst team in the league. The vibe around the franchise has shifted from "we can turn this around" to "this might be the end." According to Charania's reporting, Giannis has been telling the organization "for months" that he believes the time to part ways has come. The 2021 championship feels like ancient history. The supporting cast has gotten older. The front office has failed to build a contender around him. And now Giannis, at 30 years old, is ready to move on.

Giannis is currently out with a calf strain, his second injury of the 2025-26 season. He hasn't played since January 23, and his return timeline remains "uncertain." But his contract situation gives Milwaukee some leverage. He's locked into the 2025-26 and 2026-27 seasons thanks to the three-year, $186 million extension he signed in 2023. He has a player option for 2027-28. The Bucks don't have to trade him this week. They can wait until the offseason if the deadline offers don't meet their sky-high asking price. Multiple reports have indicated that Milwaukee is "asking for the moon," demanding a blue-chip young talent AND a surplus of draft picks. They're not desperate. But they are listening for the first time ever.

What a Curry-Giannis Pairing Would Look Like

If this trade happens, we'd be witnessing one of the most devastating offensive combinations in NBA history. Think about it: Steph Curry, the greatest shooter who ever lived, spacing the floor to infinity while Giannis Antetokounmpo bulldozes his way to the rim. Every pick-and-roll would be a nightmare for opposing defenses. Do you switch Curry onto Giannis? He's getting dunked on. Do you leave Curry open? He's drilling a three. Do you double the ball? Someone's cutting backdoor. The math simply doesn't work for defenses. Stephen A. Smith, never one for subtlety, said it would be "unfair" if Giannis ended up with Steph. "Golden State would coast to the title," he predicted.

Curry is 37 now, but he's still one of the best players in the league. He's averaging 22.4 points per game on 45% shooting from three. Draymond Green is 35 but remains an elite defender and playmaker. Adding Giannis, even at 30 with some injury concerns, would immediately vault the Warriors back into championship contention. It would give Curry one more legitimate shot at a fifth ring. It would give Giannis a chance to prove he can win outside Milwaukee. The basketball fit is undeniable. The only question is whether the Bucks will accept what Golden State is offering.

The Competition: Knicks, Heat, and Timberwolves

The Warriors aren't the only team in the mix. Charania named three other organizations with strong interest: the New York Knicks, Miami Heat, and Minnesota Timberwolves. The Knicks have been described as ready to make "aggressive offers" and have young assets like Quentin Grimes and draft capital to dangle. The Heat have been holding back trade assets specifically for a Giannis pursuit, with Tyler Herro as the centerpiece of any potential package. Minnesota is intriguing because Giannis has reportedly expressed interest in teaming with Anthony Edwards, though the Timberwolves lack the draft picks to make a compelling offer.

One team notably absent from the conversation is San Antonio. The Spurs were linked to Giannis last summer, but they're not in the mix this time around. Philadelphia hasn't jumped in either, though there's an interesting connection: Giannis and Tyrese Maxey share the same trainer, Drew Hanlen, which apparently has the 76ers on Giannis's radar. But for now, it's a four-team race, and Golden State appears to be leading the pack.

The Timeline: Deadline or Offseason?

Here's the sobering reality: this trade probably isn't happening before February 5. ESPN's Bobby Marks said on Thursday that while he wasn't surprised by the Charania report, he'd "be more surprised if a deal gets done by next Thursday." Milwaukee has made clear they're not in a rush. They're willing to navigate this in the offseason if their price point isn't met. The smart money is still betting on a summer trade, when more teams can enter the bidding and Milwaukee can conduct a proper auction. But the door is open. For the first time in Giannis's career, the Bucks are entertaining the idea of life without him.

Steph Curry, for his part, isn't losing sleep over the rumors. After Golden State's 140-124 win over the Utah Jazz on Wednesday, Curry addressed the speculation head-on: "I'm not paying attention to any of the rumors," he said. Classic Steph. But you have to wonder what's going through his mind. He and Giannis at that bourbon party last February. The mutual admiration built over years. The Octagon connection. Joe Lacob's decade-long dream. The pieces are all there. The only question is whether Milwaukee will finally say yes.

The Bottom Line

This isn't your typical NBA trade rumor. This is years of behind-the-scenes positioning finally coming to a head. The Warriors have wanted Giannis for nearly a decade. Giannis has expressed his admiration for Curry publicly and privately. He showed up to Curry's party during All-Star Weekend with his family and his team's co-owner. The Bucks are listening to offers for the first time ever. Golden State has a substantial package ready to deploy. The mutual interest is real. The timing is right. The question now is whether Milwaukee's asking price and Golden State's willingness to pay can meet in the middle. If they do, we might be witnessing the most significant NBA trade since Kevin Garnett to Boston, a move that changes the championship landscape overnight. Steph and Giannis. On the same team. After all these years, the dream might actually become reality.


PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME

Bill Belichick Denied First-Ballot Hall of Fame Entry: Six Super Bowls Weren't Enough as Spygate Shadows and Kraft Rivalry Cloud the Greatest Coaching Resume in NFL History

Posted: January 27, 2026, 2:36 PM ET

Bill Belichick on the sideline during the 2025 college football season at UNC

Bill Belichick, now coaching at UNC, was denied first-ballot entry into the Pro Football Hall of Fame | Photo: ESPN / Growl Bros.

New England Patriots

Patriots Legacy

THE SNUB: Belichick fell short of the 40 out of 50 votes (80%) required for induction | First year of eligibility | Hall representative informed him last Friday

THE CONTEXT: Spygate and Deflategate discussed during deliberations | Bitter feud with fellow finalist Robert Kraft | Mentor Bill Parcells was also not first-ballot

Six Super Bowl championships as a head coach. Two more as a defensive coordinator. A career record of 333-178. The most division titles by any head coach in NFL history. The most conference championships in the Super Bowl era. A game plan from Super Bowl XXV that literally sits inside the Pro Football Hall of Fame right now. And none of it was enough. Bill Belichick, the architect of the greatest dynasty professional football has ever seen, will not be a first-ballot Hall of Famer. Let that sink in for a second. The man who won more Super Bowls than any coach in history couldn't get 80% of voters to put him in on the first try.

According to four sources with firsthand knowledge of the outcome, Belichick fell short of the 40 out of 50 votes needed for induction during his first year of eligibility. A Hall representative called Belichick last Friday afternoon with the news. Several sources who spoke with the coach over the weekend described him as "puzzled" and "disappointed." One source relayed that Belichick asked an associate a question that perfectly encapsulates the absurdity of this situation: "Six Super Bowls isn't enough?" Another source added: "Politics kept him out. He doesn't believe this is a reflection on his accomplishments." He also reportedly asked, "What does a guy have to do?"

The Resume That Wasn't Enough

Let's lay out exactly what the Hall of Fame voters looked at and decided wasn't worthy of first-ballot enshrinement. Belichick's career coaching record stands at 333-178 in regular season and playoffs combined, second all-time only to Don Shula's 347. He won six Super Bowls as head coach of the New England Patriots (XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX, XLIX, LI, and LIII) and two more as the defensive coordinator of the New York Giants (XXV and XXX). That's eight total. Nobody else is close. He led the Patriots to nine Super Bowl appearances as head coach, 13 AFC Championship Games, and 17 AFC East division titles. He won three AP NFL Coach of the Year awards in 2003, 2007, and 2010. He was named to the NFL 2000s All-Decade Team, the 2010s All-Decade Team, and the NFL 100th Anniversary All-Time Team.

He posted 21 winning seasons as a head coach. He went to 12 Super Bowls in some capacity. His defensive game plan from the Giants' stunning 20-19 upset of the Buffalo Bills in Super Bowl XXV is considered so important to the sport that it's already enshrined in Canton. The actual game plan. In the actual Hall of Fame. The building where they just decided the man who created it doesn't deserve to walk through the front door on his first try.

The Ghosts of Spygate and Deflategate

So what happened? Multiple sources confirmed that Spygate and Deflategate, the twin cheating scandals that shadowed the Patriots dynasty, were discussed extensively during the voting deliberations on January 13th, which ran from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Bill Polian, a Hall committee voter and former general manager of the Buffalo Bills and Indianapolis Colts (two of New England's fiercest rivals during the dynasty years), reportedly told some voters he believed Belichick should "wait a year" before induction as penance for the 2007 Spygate scandal. A veteran Hall voter, speaking on condition of anonymity, put it bluntly: "The only explanation was the cheating stuff. It really bothered some of the guys."

Here's the thing about Spygate. In 2007, the Patriots were caught videotaping the New York Jets' defensive coaches' signals from an unauthorized location. The NFL fined Belichick $500,000, the maximum allowed and the largest fine ever imposed on a coach at the time. The Patriots were fined $250,000 and docked their original first-round selection in the 2008 NFL Draft. It was a serious violation, and Belichick took the brunt of the punishment. Then came Deflategate in 2015, when it was determined that Patriots locker room personnel had tampered with game balls. Tom Brady was suspended four games, the team was fined $1 million, and they lost first-round and fourth-round draft picks. Belichick was not directly punished for Deflategate, but the stain followed him. And then there was Spygate II in 2019, when a Patriots film crew violated league policy by filming the Cleveland Browns' sideline, resulting in a $1.1 million fine and the loss of a 2021 third-round draft pick.

Ted Johnson, the former Patriots linebacker who won three Super Bowls under Belichick, was one of the most vocal opponents of first-ballot status. "I would say Belichick, by far, is the most responsible for the cheating scandals," Johnson said. He added: "I don't know if a coach has had more success than Bill when it comes to championships, but also more negative kind of stories that he's brought upon himself." Johnson clarified that Belichick should eventually get in, just not on the first ballot. That distinction clearly mattered to enough voters.

The Kraft Factor: When Dynasty Builders Become Bitter Enemies

This year's vote carried an unprecedented wrinkle. Belichick and Robert Kraft, the owner who brought him to New England and built the infrastructure for the dynasty, were both finalists in the same class. Belichick was the coaching category finalist. Kraft, 84 years old and in his 14th year of campaigning, was the contributor category finalist. It marked the first time Kraft made it this far in the process. The two men built one of the greatest dynasties in American sports history together. And they now apparently can't stand each other.

Kraft and Belichick have been described as "bitter antagonists" since parting ways in January 2024. After an especially painful 4-13 season in 2023, Kraft essentially forced Belichick out. The animosity has only intensified since. Earlier this fall, Kraft didn't invite Belichick to attend Bill Parcells' Patriots Hall of Fame induction ceremony, a slight that Belichick made clear he was displeased about. Multiple sources have noted that the personal feud between the two men, playing out in public and behind closed doors, created a toxic dynamic heading into the vote.

The Math Problem: Five Finalists, Three Votes

Here's where the voting structure itself becomes a factor. The Pro Football Hall of Fame requires a candidate to receive at least 80% of the full Selection Committee's votes (40 out of 50) to be inducted. But each voter can only select three out of the five finalists, and a maximum of three finalists can be elected in any given year. This year's five finalists included Belichick (coach), Kraft (contributor), and three senior nominees: Ken Anderson, the Bengals quarterback and 1981 NFL MVP; Roger Craig, the 49ers running back who was the first player to rush and receive for 1,000 yards in the same season; and L.C. Greenwood, the Steelers defensive end and "Steel Curtain" member who won four Super Bowls in the 1970s.

With only three votes per ballot and strong cases across the board, multiple sources had predicted before the vote that it was possible, maybe even probable, that Kraft could be elected but not Belichick, or vice versa. The senior nominees had passionate advocates who had been lobbying for decades. Anderson, Craig, and Greenwood represent some of the most prominent "snubs" in Hall history. Their supporters weren't about to waste their limited votes on someone they assumed would get in regardless.

Stunned Reactions Across the Football World

Peter King, who has been a Hall of Fame voter for 32 years and did not cast a ballot this year, captured the mood perfectly when told the news. His exact words: "Holy f---! Oh f---! ... I'm very, very surprised." He added: "A lot of things happen in that room that are unexpected. And of course this is a big surprise to me." King also noted that the snub pushes back the candidacies of other coaching legends like Mike Shanahan, Tom Coughlin, and Mike Holmgren, all of whom were among the 12 coaching semifinalists this cycle. If Belichick can't get in on the first ballot, what hope do they have?

The irony here is thick enough to cut with a knife. Belichick's mentor, Bill Parcells, also wasn't a first-ballot Hall of Famer. Parcells, who won two Super Bowls with the Giants and is widely considered one of the 10 greatest coaches in NFL history, was passed over for the Class of 2012 in his first year of eligibility before being inducted the following year. History, it seems, has a cruel sense of humor. The student has now followed the teacher in being told to wait.

From Foxborough to Chapel Hill: The Fall and the Waiting Game

Belichick's current situation adds another layer to this story. After being essentially forced out by Kraft in January 2024, Belichick spent a year in media before taking the head coaching job at the University of North Carolina. His first season in Chapel Hill was, to put it mildly, rough. The Tar Heels went 4-8, finishing 14th in the ACC. UNC ranked 129th out of 134 FBS teams in total offense at just 289 yards per game, and the team averaged a dismal 19.3 points per game. They never scored more than 27 points against an FBS opponent. After losing three straight games to in-state rivals Wake Forest, Duke, and NC State to close the season, the contrast between the six-time Super Bowl champion and the guy coaching a sub-.500 college team couldn't have been starker.

Of course, Belichick's eligibility for the Pro Football Hall of Fame was made possible precisely because he took the UNC job. The Hall changed its rules to reduce the waiting period from five years to one, and since Belichick moved to college coaching rather than remaining in the NFL, he became eligible for the Class of 2026. Without the UNC move, he'd still be waiting until at least 2029. There's something poetic about a man who spent 24 years building the most dominant franchise in football history now sitting in Chapel Hill, waiting for a phone call from Canton that may not come for another year.

What Happens Next

The official Class of 2026 inductees will be announced during the NFL Honors awards show on February 5th at the Palace of Fine Arts in San Francisco, as part of the Super Bowl LX festivities. The Seahawks and Patriots, Belichick's former team now coached by Mike Vrabel, are set to meet in Santa Clara on February 8th. Belichick will almost certainly be watching from his living room when his old franchise, the team he built from a 5-11 laughingstock into the most successful dynasty of the salary cap era, takes the field for the biggest game of the year. Whether he'll be announced as a Hall of Famer during that same Super Bowl week remains to be seen, but based on the reports, the answer is no.

Nobody seriously doubts that Belichick will eventually be enshrined in Canton. The question was never "if," only "when," and now we know the answer isn't "immediately." For a man whose entire career was built on meticulous preparation, ruthless efficiency, and an unwillingness to accept anything less than total victory, being told to wait must feel like a personal affront. Six Super Bowls. 333 wins. Eight rings. A game plan already in the building. And the voters said, "Not yet." Whether it was Spygate, the Kraft feud, the voting math, or some combination of all three, the greatest coach in NFL history will have to walk through Canton's doors on his second try. It's a stunning result, and one that says as much about the Hall of Fame's voting process as it does about the complicated, controversial, and undeniably brilliant career of William Stephen Belichick.


NFL COACHING CAROUSEL

Bills Promote Joe Brady to Head Coach on Five-Year Deal: The 36-Year-Old Offensive Architect Tasked With Getting Josh Allen to the Super Bowl

Posted: January 27, 2026, 12:17 PM ET

Joe Brady, newly named Buffalo Bills head coach, on the sidelines during the 2025 NFL season

Joe Brady takes over as the 21st head coach in Buffalo Bills history | Photo: Buffalo Bills

Buffalo Bills

Buffalo Bills

THE HIRE: Joe Brady promoted from offensive coordinator to head coach | 5-year contract | 36 years old (youngest HC in NFL)

THE CONTEXT: Replaces Sean McDermott (98-50, 0 Super Bowls) who was fired Jan 19 after divisional round loss to Denver | Brady was first candidate interviewed

The Buffalo Bills didn't need to look very far. After interviewing nine candidates, holding a search that included everyone from Brian Daboll to Philip Rivers, and spending the better part of two weeks figuring out who should be the franchise's 21st head coach, the answer was sitting in the same building the entire time. Joe Brady, the 36-year-old offensive coordinator who transformed Buffalo's offense into one of the most potent units in the NFL, has agreed to a five-year deal to become the next head coach of the Buffalo Bills. It's the kind of hire that makes you wonder why they even bothered talking to anyone else.

The Numbers Don't Lie

Here's what Joe Brady did during his two full seasons calling plays in Buffalo. In 2024, the Bills offense ranked second in the NFL in scoring at 30.6 points per game. Josh Allen won his first MVP award. The team made the AFC Championship Game. In 2025, the offense ranked fourth in scoring (28.3 PPG), first in rushing yards per game (159.6), first in time of possession (33:08), fourth in total yards (376.3), and fourth in third-down conversion rate (44.8%). That's not just good. That's elite. That's consistently, undeniably, year-over-year dominant.

Since Brady took over as play-caller midway through the 2023 season after Ken Dorsey was fired, the Bills have ranked first in the entire NFL in EPA per play (0.14) and second in points per game (29.1). That's a 35-game sample size spanning regular season and playoffs. The team posted nine games with 30-plus points this season, tied with the Rams for the most in the league. Running back James Cook III finished with the rushing title. The Bills became the first team in NFL history to record at least 30 rushing and 30 receiving touchdowns in a single season in 2024. These aren't just numbers on a spreadsheet. This is a coach who fundamentally changed how Buffalo plays football.

From Hollywood to Orchard Park

Brady's journey to the top of the NFL coaching tree is one of the best stories in football. Born in Hollywood, Florida, he played wide receiver at William & Mary before getting into coaching as a linebackers coach at his alma mater. He spent two years as a graduate assistant at Penn State, then joined Sean Payton's staff in New Orleans as an offensive assistant in 2017-18, where the Saints' offense ranked third in total points and sixth in total yards over that span. That's where Brady learned the art of offensive design from one of the greatest offensive minds in NFL history.

Then came 2019 at LSU, and that's where Brady became a legend. As the passing game coordinator and receivers coach, Brady transformed what had been a stale, run-heavy Tigers offense ranked 68th in the nation in 2018 into arguably the greatest college offense ever assembled. Joe Burrow threw for 5,671 yards and 60 touchdowns against just six interceptions. Justin Jefferson and Ja'Marr Chase both became first-round NFL picks. The Tigers averaged a staggering 568.5 yards per game, led the NCAA in total offense, and went 15-0 to win the national championship. Burrow won the Heisman. Brady won the Broyles Award as the nation's top assistant coach. He was 29 years old. The football world took notice.

The Setback That Made Him Better

Not everything went smoothly. Brady's first shot at the NFL came as the Carolina Panthers' offensive coordinator in 2020-21 under Matt Rhule. He was 30 years old, coaching Sam Darnold and Teddy Bridgewater, and working within a dysfunctional organization that was going nowhere fast. He was fired in December 2021. It was a humbling experience for a guy who had been dubbed a "boy genius" after LSU. But in hindsight, that failure might have been the best thing that ever happened to him. It taught him patience. It taught him how not to run an operation. And it drove him to Buffalo in 2022, where he rebuilt his reputation from the ground up.

Brady joined the Bills as a quarterbacks coach, working directly with Josh Allen for two seasons before opportunity knocked again. When the Bills fired Ken Dorsey after a 5-5 start in 2023, Brady was promoted to interim OC. The offense immediately took off. Allen looked rejuvenated. Brady called what he dubbed the "Everybody Eats" system, spreading the ball around and getting a league-record 13 offensive players into the end zone as receivers in 2024. The philosophy was simple: be unpredictable, be aggressive, and let your best player (Allen) cook. It worked spectacularly.

Why McDermott Had to Go

Understanding this hire requires understanding why Sean McDermott was fired in the first place. McDermott's tenure in Buffalo was, by almost every measure, a massive success. He went 98-50 in nine seasons. He led the Bills to eight playoff appearances, including seven consecutive. Five straight AFC East titles. Two AFC Championship Game trips. He turned a franchise that was synonymous with mediocrity into a perennial contender. But "perennial contender" stopped being enough. The Bills lost in the divisional round four out of the last five seasons, and the most recent exit, a 33-30 overtime loss to the Denver Broncos on January 17th, was the final straw.

Owner Terry Pegula was blunt about it: "My decision to bring in a new coach was based on the results of our game in Denver." One of the defining moments of that loss came right before halftime, when Buffalo tried to push the ball downfield instead of kneeling out the clock. Allen fumbled with seconds left, Denver kicked an easy field goal to go up 20-10, and the game's entire momentum shifted. The Bills rallied back but ultimately lost in overtime. It was McDermott's 8th career playoff loss in 16 tries. For a team with a reigning MVP quarterback and a roster built to win now, "close but not quite" just wasn't cutting it anymore.

The Unusual Hire

Let's address the elephant in the room. Firing your head coach and then promoting someone from his staff is an unusual move, and some people around the league have raised eyebrows. If the team wasn't good enough under McDermott, how much will really change with one of his assistants running the show? It's a fair question, and here's the fair answer: the Bills' problem wasn't on offense. It was never on offense. Under Brady, the Bills were one of the most explosive, efficient, and creative offenses in the NFL. The issues were situational coaching, clock management, and defensive breakdowns in critical playoff moments. Those were McDermott's department.

Brady gives the Bills continuity where it matters most: with Josh Allen. Allen, who turns 30 in May, was heavily involved in the coaching search, sitting in on interviews with GM Brandon Beane. The fact that Allen endorsed Brady speaks volumes. Allen has had a passer rating above 100 in back-to-back seasons for the first time in his career under Brady. He won the MVP. He's playing the best football of his life. You don't blow that up. You build on it. Brady's promotion ensures that the offensive system, the playbook, the language, and the relationship with the franchise quarterback remain intact.

Building the Staff and Looking Ahead

The first order of business for Brady will be assembling a coaching staff, and the defensive coordinator hire is the most critical decision he'll make. According to ESPN's Adam Schefter, Denver Broncos defensive pass game coordinator Jim Leonhard is expected to be a leading candidate. That's an intriguing name. Leonhard played 10 seasons in the NFL, coached at Wisconsin before moving to the NFL ranks, and just helped coordinate a Denver defense that knocked the Bills out of the playoffs. There's a certain poetry to that. Brady also inherits a franchise on the verge of a new chapter literally. The Bills are moving across the street into a newly constructed $2.1 billion stadium, giving the team a state-of-the-art home to match their championship aspirations.

At 36 years old, Joe Brady is the youngest head coach in the NFL. He's also arguably the most qualified young offensive mind in the league. He's coached under Sean Payton. He engineered the greatest college offensive season in history at LSU. He survived being fired in Carolina and came back stronger. He turned Josh Allen into an MVP. He built a top-five offense two years running. And now he has five years, a new stadium, and the best quarterback in the AFC to prove that all of it was just the beginning. Buffalo doesn't just want to contend anymore. Buffalo wants to win its first Super Bowl. And they're betting on the 36-year-old kid from Hollywood, Florida to get them there.

The Full Coaching Search

For the record, the Bills interviewed nine candidates before landing on Brady: Brian Daboll (the former Bills OC who won five Super Bowls as a Patriots assistant and coached the Giants), Lou Anarumo (Bengals DC), Anthony Lynn (former Chargers HC), Anthony Weaver (Dolphins DC), Davis Webb (Giants assistant), Grant Udinski (Jaguars OC), Nate Scheelhaase, and, yes, Philip Rivers, the 44-year-old retired quarterback and current high school coach who ultimately removed himself from consideration three days after interviewing. It was a thorough process led by Beane and involving Allen, and in the end, they came home to the guy who'd been lighting up scoreboards in Orchard Park for two years. Sometimes the best answer is the one that's been staring you in the face.


SUPER BOWL LX PREVIEW

Super Bowl LX Preview: Seahawks vs Patriots, The Rematch 11 Years in the Making

Posted: January 25, 2026, 11:55 PM ET

Seattle Seahawks celebrate NFC Championship victory over the Los Angeles Rams at Lumen Field, January 25, 2026

The Seahawks celebrate after beating the Rams 31-27 in the NFC Championship | Photo: ESPN

Seattle Seahawks

14-3 (NFC)

VS
New England Patriots

14-3 (AFC)

THE MATCHUP: Super Bowl LX | Sunday, February 8, 2026 | 6:30 PM ET | Levi's Stadium, Santa Clara, CA | NBC/Peacock

THE LINE: Seahawks -4.5 | ML: SEA -205 / NE +170 | O/U: 46.5 | Both teams entered 2025 at 60-1 to win the Super Bowl

It's happening. Eleven years after Malcolm Butler's goal-line interception sealed one of the most heartbreaking finishes in NFL history, the Seattle Seahawks and New England Patriots are headed back to the Super Bowl to settle the score. Super Bowl LX on February 8th at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara is a rematch that nobody saw coming, and everyone should be thrilled about. Two 14-3 teams. Two preseason 60-1 longshots. Two franchise quarterbacks who weren't even on these rosters 18 months ago. And the ghost of one of the most iconic plays in Super Bowl history lurking over every single snap. This is going to be incredible.

The Seahawks punched their ticket tonight with a gutsy 31-27 victory over the Los Angeles Rams in the NFC Championship at Lumen Field. Sam Darnold was magnificent, finishing 25-of-36 for 346 yards and three touchdowns while playing through an oblique injury for the second consecutive week. Jaxon Smith-Njigba, the league's receiving yards leader this season with 1,793, torched the Rams secondary for 10 catches and 153 yards. And Kenneth Walker III tied Marshawn Lynch's franchise playoff record with his fourth postseason rushing touchdown. Meanwhile, the Patriots beat the Broncos 10-7 in a blizzard earlier today, with Drake Maye rushing for the go-ahead score and the defense holding Denver to just seven points. Two roads, wildly different styles, same destination: Santa Clara.

The Ghost of Super Bowl XLIX

You can't talk about this matchup without going back to February 1, 2015. The Seahawks, defending Super Bowl champions, had the ball at the Patriots' one-yard line with 26 seconds left, trailing 28-24. Marshawn Lynch had just carried the ball to the one on the previous play. Every person in University of Phoenix Stadium, every viewer at home, and every sportsbook in Las Vegas expected Pete Carroll to hand the ball to Beast Mode and let him punch it in. Instead, offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell called a quick slant to Ricardo Lockette. Malcolm Butler, an undrafted rookie who was fifth on the depth chart entering the game, jumped the route and intercepted Russell Wilson's pass. Game over. Patriots win their fourth Super Bowl. It remains the most debated play-call in NFL history, and it changed the trajectory of both franchises for the next decade.

Here's what makes the rematch so compelling: Butler had actually been torched by Seattle receiver Chris Matthews all game and was only inserted into the defense midway through the third quarter out of desperation. He recognized Seattle's two-receiver stack formation from film study, remembered Belichick barking at him during practice to jump the slant if he saw that look, and made the play of a lifetime. The interception was his first as a professional. It sent the Patriots dynasty into hyperdrive, with Brady and Belichick making three more Super Bowl trips and winning two of them. The Seahawks, meanwhile, never got back to the NFC Championship Game with Wilson and Carroll. One play. Two franchises. Entirely different paths.

Everything Has Changed, and Nothing Has Changed

The symmetry of this Super Bowl is almost eerie. Both teams finished 14-3. Both entered the season at 60-1 odds. Both are led by quarterbacks who weren't on the roster two years ago. Both have first-time or second-year head coaches. And both just completed storybook turnarounds that nobody predicted. But the names, the faces, the styles of play, everything is different from 2015. There's no Tom Brady. No Russell Wilson. No Bill Belichick. No Pete Carroll. No Marshawn Lynch. No Rob Gronkowski. No Legion of Boom. This isn't a legacy game. It's a new chapter entirely.

Instead, we get Sam Darnold vs. Drake Maye. Two quarterbacks whose careers have taken dramatically different paths to reach the same stage. Darnold, now 28, was the third overall pick in the 2018 draft by the New York Jets, where he spent three miserable years before bouncing to Carolina, San Francisco, Minnesota (where he went 14-2 in 2024), and now Seattle. He signed with the Seahawks in March 2025 after Tyler Lockett, Geno Smith, and DK Metcalf all departed. This season he posted 4,048 yards, a 67.7% completion rate, 25 touchdowns, and a 99.1 passer rating, earning his second consecutive Pro Bowl selection. He's become the first quarterback in NFL history to record 14 wins in his first season with two different teams in back-to-back years. That's a stat that belongs in a museum.

Maye, meanwhile, is just 22 years old. The third overall pick in the 2024 draft out of North Carolina, he struggled through a 4-13 rookie season before exploding in Year Two under Mike Vrabel. His 2025 numbers are absurd: 4,394 passing yards, 31 touchdowns, only eight interceptions, a 72.0% completion rate (first in the NFL), 8.9 yards per attempt (first), and a 113.5 passer rating (first). He also rushed for 450 yards and four touchdowns. He's an MVP finalist, a Pro Bowler, a second-team All-Pro, and now an AFC Champion. If he wins the Super Bowl, he'd become just the fifth quarterback to win it all in his second NFL season.

The Coaches: Macdonald vs. Vrabel

The coaching matchup is fascinating on its own. Mike Macdonald, Seattle's head coach, is just 38 years old and in his second year leading the Seahawks. He went 10-7 in Year One and then exploded to a franchise-record 14-3 this season, building one of the most dominant defenses in the league. His "Dark Side" defense, as Seattle's players have dubbed it, ranks first in the NFL in opponent success rate on designed runs at just 34%, with an EPA per play of minus-0.15. You simply cannot run the football against these guys. That's going to be a massive factor against a Patriots team that just won the AFC Championship with 64 rushing yards from Maye and a grinding ground game.

Mike Vrabel, New England's head coach, is the bigger name with the more incredible storyline. The former Patriots linebacker won three Super Bowls as a player in New England (XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX) and caught two touchdown passes in Super Bowls. He was fired by the Tennessee Titans after the 2023 season despite a 54-45 record, sat out 2024, and then took the Patriots job. In Year One, he's orchestrated the biggest single-season turnaround in franchise history, going from 4-13 to 14-3, a 10-game improvement that ties the best in NFL history. He was named the 2025 NFL Coach of the Year by the PFWA. If the Patriots win Super Bowl LX, Vrabel would become the first person in NFL history to win a Super Bowl as both a player and head coach with the same franchise. The man is literally trying to make history that no one has ever achieved.

The X-Factor: Seattle's Weapons vs. New England's Defense

The key matchup in this Super Bowl is going to be Seattle's explosive passing attack against New England's stingy defense. The Seahawks have Jaxon Smith-Njigba, who obliterated DK Metcalf's franchise record with 1,793 receiving yards this season. They have Cooper Kupp, the 2022 Super Bowl MVP who was acquired in free agency and gives Darnold a veteran weapon with championship experience. And they have Kenneth Walker III, who has been a battering ram in the postseason with four rushing touchdowns. That's a loaded arsenal, and Darnold has been cooking with it all year.

But here's the thing: the Patriots' defense has been historically good in the playoffs. They've allowed just 26 total points across three postseason games under Vrabel, which is tied for the fourth fewest by a head coach in his first three playoff games with a franchise. They held the Broncos to seven points in a blizzard. They held the Chargers to just 14 in the divisional round. Christian Gonzalez, the second-year cornerback, has been a shutdown force. The pass rush, anchored by Leonard Taylor III, has been relentless. Can Darnold and Smith-Njigba crack this code? That's the billion-dollar question heading into February 8th.

The Turnover Battle Will Decide Everything

If there's one stat that should terrify Patriots fans, it's this: Drake Maye fumbled six times in New England's first two playoff games, losing three of them. He also threw a tipped-ball interception against the Chargers. The Patriots have been living dangerously with ball security, and they've gotten away with it because their defense has been good enough to clean up the mess. Against Seattle, that margin for error shrinks dramatically.

The Seahawks are plus-4 in turnover margin this postseason. Darnold has been careful with the football, avoiding turnovers in high-pressure moments throughout the playoffs. If Maye puts the ball on the ground against Seattle's defense the way he did against the Chargers and Broncos, this game could get away from New England fast. The Patriots need clean football. Anything less, and Seattle's defense will make them pay. The Seahawks' run defense is suffocating, their pass rush is relentless, and their secondary is opportunistic. Maye's legs won the AFC Championship for him, but he'll need his arm, and his ball security, to win the Super Bowl.

The Stage is Set

Levi's Stadium. February 8th. 6:30 PM Eastern. Bad Bunny at halftime. The Seahawks are 4.5-point favorites. The over/under is 46.5. And the narrative writes itself: a revenge game for Seattle, a coronation opportunity for Maye, a history-making moment for Vrabel, and a chance to exorcise the demons of Malcolm Butler's interception once and for all. Underdogs have covered five straight Super Bowls, going 4-1 outright in those games and winning three in a row. Since 2001, underdogs are 13-11 outright and a staggering 17-7 against the spread. If you're a Patriots fan, that's the stat you're hanging your hat on.

Regardless of which side you're on, this is the Super Bowl that every football fan should be excited about. Two teams that nobody believed in. Two quarterbacks who have been counted out, written off, and doubted at every turn. Two coaches with something to prove. And the specter of one of the greatest plays in NFL history hanging over every single moment. Super Bowl LX isn't just a football game. It's redemption. It's vindication. It's the best story the NFL could possibly tell. And in two weeks, we get to watch it unfold.

Related Coverage: NFL Analysis | Latest Picks | Handicapping Hub


AFC CHAMPIONS

Patriots Beat Broncos 10-7 in Snowy AFC Championship: New England Punches Ticket to Super Bowl LX

Posted: January 25, 2026, 10:30 PM ET

Drake Maye and the New England Patriots celebrate AFC Championship victory over Denver Broncos
New England Patriots 10 - 7 Denver Broncos

THE GAME: Patriots 10, Broncos 7 | Empower Field at Mile High | Snowy conditions, 26°F | New England extends NFL record with 12th Super Bowl appearance

THE HEROES: Drake Maye: 10/21, 86 pass yds, 64 rush yds, 1 TD | Christian Gonzalez: Game-sealing INT with 2:11 left | Leonard Taylor III: Tipped Wil Lutz's 45-yard FG attempt

The New England Patriots are going back to the Super Bowl. In a game that felt ripped from a 1970s NFL Films reel, complete with swirling snow, brutal cold, and defense that would make Bill Belichick smile, the Patriots outlasted the Denver Broncos 10-7 in the AFC Championship Game at Empower Field at Mile High. Drake Maye, the 22-year-old quarterback who has emerged as one of the best young players in football, ran for the go-ahead touchdown and then kneeled out the clock to punch New England's ticket to Super Bowl LX in Santa Clara. The Patriots are back in the Big Game for the first time since Tom Brady's departure, extending their NFL record to 12 Super Bowl appearances.

This wasn't pretty. This wasn't a showcase of modern offensive football. This was a street fight in a blizzard, exactly the kind of game that Mike Vrabel's Patriots were built to win. New England finished with just 196 total yards. Maye completed only 10 of 21 passes for 86 yards. But when the game was on the line, the MVP finalist made the plays that mattered, scrambling for 64 yards on just five carries, including a beautiful 6-yard touchdown run that gave the Patriots a 10-7 lead they would never relinquish. On the other side, Denver's backup quarterback Jarrett Stidham, pressed into service after Bo Nix broke his ankle in last week's divisional round win, gave it everything he had but ultimately came up short against a suffocating New England defense.

Defense Wins Championships

The story of this Patriots playoff run has been their defense, and the AFC Championship was no different. While Maye's regular season MVP candidacy generated all the headlines, with his 77.1 QBR ranking first in the NFL, his 31 touchdowns ranking third, and his 4,394 passing yards ranking fourth, it's been the defense carrying the load in January. The Broncos, who had the league's third-ranked defense during the regular season, were expected to give Maye fits. And they did. Denver held the Patriots to just 86 passing yards, the lowest total of Maye's professional career.

But New England's defense was even better. They held Stidham to 132 yards on 15-of-28 passing. They forced the turnover that changed the game, a Stidham mistake near the end of the first half that completely shifted momentum. And when it mattered most, with the Broncos driving for a potential game-tying score in the fourth quarter, cornerback Christian Gonzalez delivered the dagger. Stidham, trying to force a ball to Marvin Mims along the right sideline, underthrew his receiver, and Gonzalez was there to intercept it. The Patriots took over on their own 36-yard line with 2:11 remaining, and Maye did the rest, running for a first down on third-and-six before kneeling out the clock.

The Bo Nix Factor

There's no sugarcoating it: the Broncos were severely hampered by the loss of starting quarterback Bo Nix. The second-year signal caller, who had been one of the best stories of the 2025 season under Sean Payton's guidance, broke his ankle late in Denver's divisional round victory over the Buffalo Bills. That left Jarrett Stidham, making his first start in two seasons and just the fifth start of his career, to lead the Broncos in the biggest game in franchise history since Peyton Manning's final ride a decade ago.

Stidham gave it everything he had. He opened the scoring with a beautiful 52-yard strike to Marvin Mims that set up the game's first touchdown, giving Denver a 7-0 lead that felt insurmountable given the conditions. But the turnover before halftime was catastrophic. And the late interception to Gonzalez sealed the Broncos' fate. It's a cruel end for a Denver team that had legitimate Super Bowl aspirations with Nix healthy. Instead, they'll head into the offseason wondering what might have been.

Maye's Moment

Drake Maye's touchdown run will be replayed in New England for decades. Facing a third-and-goal from the six-yard line, with the score tied 7-7 and the snow coming down harder than ever, Maye took the snap, faked a handoff, and kept it himself on a quarterback draw. He glided through the middle of the Denver defense untouched, crossing the goal line to give the Patriots their first lead of the game. It was the kind of play that separates the good quarterbacks from the great ones, the ability to make something happen when the pocket collapses and the designed play breaks down.

The 22-year-old finished the game with more rushing yards (64) than passing yards (86), a testament to both Denver's elite pass defense and Maye's remarkable athleticism. He was hit, he was pressured, he was uncomfortable all night. But when the game was on the line, he delivered. That's what MVP-caliber quarterbacks do. "Every week, we're trying to come out and dominate," Maye said after the game. "In our minds, it was our defense versus their defense. See who could make more plays, create more turnovers, stop the run and get the ball back to our offense." New England's defense made the plays. Maye made the one that mattered most.

Vrabel's Masterpiece

Mike Vrabel took over a Patriots team that had posted three consecutive losing seasons after Tom Brady's departure. In Year One, he turned them into AFC Champions. The 14-3 regular season record was remarkable enough. The playoff run has been nothing short of stunning. New England's defense, anchored by Leonard Taylor III, Cory Durden, and Khyiris Tonga up front, has been the best unit in football during January. They've created havoc, forced turnovers, and given Maye just enough room to operate.

The blocked field goal was the cherry on top. With the Broncos driving late, Wil Lutz lined up for a 45-yard attempt that would have tied the game. Leonard Taylor III got his massive paw on the ball, sending it fluttering harmlessly to the frozen turf. It was the kind of play that encapsulates this entire Patriots defense: relentless, physical, and determined to make the opponent earn every single yard. Vrabel, the former Patriots linebacker who won three Super Bowls as a player in New England, is now headed back to the Big Game as a head coach. The symmetry is almost too perfect.

Super Bowl LX Awaits

The Patriots will travel to Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California, for Super Bowl LX on February 8th. They'll face either the Seattle Seahawks or the Los Angeles Rams, who are playing in the NFC Championship Game as we speak. New England is making its 12th Super Bowl appearance, extending an NFL record that may never be broken. It's their first trip since Super Bowl LIII after the 2018 season, when Brady, Belichick, and the dynasty were still intact.

This is a different Patriots team. Younger. Hungrier. Built around a 22-year-old quarterback who just proved he can win the biggest games in the most brutal conditions. Brady won six Super Bowls in New England. Maye now has the chance to start his own legacy in two weeks. The kid from Charlotte, North Carolina, who was the third overall pick in the 2024 draft, is two quarters away from becoming a Super Bowl champion. That's the story now. The Patriots are back. And Drake Maye is ready for his coronation.

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BREAKING NEWS

Steelers Hire Mike McCarthy as Head Coach: Pittsburgh Native Returns Home in Coaching Carousel's Latest Stunning Chapter

Posted: January 24, 2026, 3:30 PM ET

Mike McCarthy on the sideline during his time as Dallas Cowboys head coach
Dallas Cowboys Pittsburgh Steelers

THE HIRE: Mike McCarthy, 62, becomes fourth Steelers head coach since 1969 | Five-year deal | Pittsburgh native from Greenfield neighborhood | Replaces Mike Tomlin after 19 seasons

THE RESUME: 174-112-2 regular season record | Super Bowl XLV champion (2010 Packers) | 13 seasons in Green Bay | 5 seasons in Dallas | Could reunite with Aaron Rodgers

Stop me if you've heard this one before: another day, another NFL head coaching hire, another chapter in what has become the most chaotic coaching carousel this league has seen in decades. The Pittsburgh Steelers have officially agreed to hire Mike McCarthy as their next head coach, bringing the 62-year-old Super Bowl champion back to the city where he was born and raised. This isn't just a coaching change. It's a homecoming, a reunion tour, and potentially the final act in one of the most accomplished coaching careers of his generation, all wrapped into one franchise-altering decision.

Let me put this coaching carousel in perspective for you, because the numbers are absolutely staggering. We are now up to six head coaching hires in the 2026 cycle. Six. John Harbaugh bolted Baltimore for the Giants. Kevin Stefanski landed in Atlanta. Jeff Hafley took the Miami job. Robert Saleh got his second chance in Tennessee. Jesse Minter returned to Baltimore. And now McCarthy is heading to Pittsburgh. That's more than half of the 10 available jobs already filled, with the Bills, Raiders, Cardinals, and Browns still searching. In a league that prides itself on stability and continuity, this offseason has been anything but.

The Pittsburgh Kid Comes Home

There's something poetic about Mike McCarthy returning to Pittsburgh. The guy grew up in the Greenfield neighborhood, just a stone's throw from where the Steelers built their dynasty under Chuck Noll. He went to high school at Bishop Boyle, attended Baker University in Kansas, and then spent years climbing the coaching ladder before getting his shot in Green Bay. Now, at 62 years old, he's coming home to lead the franchise he grew up watching. Art Rooney II couldn't have scripted a better narrative if he tried.

But here's what makes this hire truly remarkable: it represents a complete departure from how the Steelers have done business for more than half a century. Their last three head coaches, Chuck Noll, Bill Cowher, and Mike Tomlin, were all 38 or younger when hired. All three were first-time NFL head coaches. The Steelers prided themselves on finding young, hungry coordinators and developing them into Hall of Fame-caliber leaders. McCarthy is neither young nor unproven. He's 62 years old with 18 years of head coaching experience, a Super Bowl ring, and a 174-112-2 regular season record. This is the Steelers saying, "We're done developing. We're ready to win now."

The Aaron Rodgers Factor

Let's address the elephant in the room, because it's the question everyone in Pittsburgh is asking: will Aaron Rodgers come back? The 42-year-old quarterback is set to become a free agent this offseason after a turbulent season with the Steelers that saw him throw for 3,897 yards and 28 touchdowns despite dealing with a fractured pinky on his throwing hand for the final six weeks. Rodgers hasn't committed to playing a 22nd NFL season. But here's the thing: if anything could convince him to run it back one more time, it might be reuniting with the coach who made him a Super Bowl champion.

McCarthy and Rodgers spent 13 seasons together in Green Bay, winning Super Bowl XLV after the 2010 season. Rodgers won two MVP awards during McCarthy's tenure. Their relationship wasn't always smooth, particularly toward the end when the Packers' offense grew stale and Rodgers reportedly pushed for McCarthy's dismissal. But time heals wounds, and both men have had plenty of time to reflect on what they accomplished together. Owner Art Rooney II acknowledged that Rodgers' decision would be affected by the coaching hire. Well, here's your answer, Aaron. Your old coach is waiting.

A Resume That Speaks for Itself

Mike McCarthy's credentials are beyond reproach. His 174-112-2 regular season record translates to a .608 winning percentage. He's won a Super Bowl. He's reached the NFC Championship Game three additional times. He turned an organization that had been dormant since the Brett Favre era into a perennial contender. In 13 seasons in Green Bay, McCarthy made the playoffs nine times, won six division titles, and transformed Rodgers from a promising second-round pick sitting behind Favre into a first-ballot Hall of Famer.

His five years in Dallas were more complicated. The Cowboys went 49-35 under McCarthy's watch, winning the NFC East three times but never advancing past the divisional round of the playoffs. Critics pointed to his conservative game management, his reliance on Dak Prescott to carry the offense, and the team's inability to perform in big moments. Jerry Jones ultimately decided not to renew McCarthy's contract after the 2024 season, ending a partnership that produced regular season success but postseason disappointment. McCarthy took 2025 off, watching from the sidelines as teams across the league imploded. Now he's ready for redemption.

Breaking the Steelers Mold

The Steelers interviewed seven candidates virtually and three in person for this job. Brian Flores, the Minnesota Vikings defensive coordinator who turned that defense into the league's best, got a sit-down. So did Anthony Weaver, the Miami Dolphins DC who's been on the rise. But in the end, Art Rooney II chose experience over potential, proven success over upside. That's a significant philosophical shift for an organization that historically bet on potential.

"I'm not sure why you waste a year of your life not trying to contend," Rooney said when explaining the decision. That quote tells you everything you need to know about why McCarthy got this job. The Steelers don't want to rebuild. They don't want to develop a young coach. They want to win now, while Rodgers still has something left in the tank, while T.J. Watt is still an All-Pro edge rusher, while the AFC is more wide open than it's been in years with the Chiefs finally showing vulnerability. This is a win-now hire in every sense of the word.

The End of the Tomlin Era

McCarthy's hiring officially closes the book on one of the most remarkable tenures in NFL history. Mike Tomlin spent 19 seasons as Steelers head coach, never once posting a losing record. Think about that. In nearly two decades of coaching, Tomlin never finished below .500. He won Super Bowl XLIII, reached Super Bowl XLV (losing to McCarthy's Packers, ironically), and navigated countless roster transitions with remarkable consistency. His 182-107-2 regular season record speaks to sustained excellence.

But Tomlin's departure, which he described as a mutual decision after a first-round playoff exit to the Houston Texans, signals that the Steelers grew tired of regular season success without championship payoff. The last time Pittsburgh won a Super Bowl was 2008. That's 17 years of waiting, of close calls, of playoff heartbreak. Tomlin's consistent competence was no longer enough. The Rooneys wanted a championship-proven coach who could push them over the top. Whether McCarthy is that guy remains to be seen, but there's no doubt he knows what it takes to win it all.

The Carousel Keeps Spinning

With McCarthy off the board, the remaining four teams, Bills, Raiders, Cardinals, and Browns, are scrambling to land their guys. Buffalo seems laser-focused on Brian Daboll, the man who developed Josh Allen and could return to complete unfinished business. The Raiders are reportedly considering Pete Carroll again, which would be fascinating given how his first stint ended after the 2025 season. The Cardinals and Browns? Your guess is as good as mine. This coaching carousel has been so unpredictable that nothing would surprise me at this point.

What I do know is this: Mike McCarthy is going to walk into Acrisure Stadium wearing black and gold, and somewhere in Greenfield, there's probably a kid who grew up watching Terry Bradshaw and the Steel Curtain who's absolutely losing his mind right now. That kid became a Super Bowl champion. He coached one of the greatest quarterbacks in NFL history. And now he's home, ready to write one more chapter. The coaching carousel's latest revolution is complete. Let the McCarthy era begin.

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NFL COACHING

Philip Rivers Interviews for Bills Head Coach: From High School Sidelines to NFL Contender in 44-Year-Old's Stunning Candidacy

Posted: January 23, 2026, 4:45 PM ET

Philip Rivers speaks at press conference after Colts game December 2025
Los Angeles Chargers Buffalo Bills

THE INTERVIEW: Philip Rivers, 44, met with Bills in Florida on Friday | Currently head coach at St. Michael Catholic HS in Alabama (43-15 record) | Strong personal relationship with Josh Allen

THE RESUME: 18 NFL seasons | 63,984 passing yards (5th all-time) | 425 TDs | 8 Pro Bowls | Returned to play 3 games for Colts in December 2025 | Never coached above high school level

This is not a drill. This is not a fever dream. This is actually happening. Philip Rivers, the 44-year-old former quarterback who was coaching high school football in Alabama six weeks ago, sat down with the Buffalo Bills on Friday to interview for their head coaching vacancy. Let me repeat that: a guy who was drawing up plays for teenagers in Fairhope, Alabama is now being considered to lead Josh Allen and one of the NFL's most talented rosters. Only in football, folks. Only in football.

The interview took place in Florida, according to multiple reports, and it wasn't just a courtesy meeting. The Bills are genuinely intrigued by what Rivers brings to the table, and a big part of that intrigue centers on his relationship with their franchise quarterback. Josh Allen has been sitting in on every coaching interview since Sean McDermott was fired on Monday, and according to NFL Network's Ian Rapoport, Allen and Rivers have developed a "strong relationship" over the years. That relationship, combined with Rivers' deep understanding of the quarterback position, has Buffalo at least willing to hear him out.

The Most Unconventional Candidate in Memory

Let's be clear about what we're dealing with here: Philip Rivers has never been on an NFL coaching staff. He's never been a coordinator at any level. He's never even been a college assistant. His coaching resume consists entirely of five seasons at St. Michael Catholic High School in Fairhope, Alabama, where he's compiled a 43-15 record and led the Cardinals to two state semifinal appearances. That's impressive for high school. It's also a massive leap to the NFL, where he'd be responsible for managing a $270 million salary cap, coordinating with a 20-person coaching staff, and preparing game plans against defensive masterminds who have been studying film for decades.

The historical precedent here is virtually nonexistent. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, only one person since 1950 has played in the NFL one season and then served as a head coach the following year: Hall of Famer Norm Van Brocklin, who finished his 12-season playing career in 1960 with the Philadelphia Eagles and then became head coach of the expansion Minnesota Vikings in 1961. Rivers technically played in the NFL just weeks ago, starting three games for the Indianapolis Colts in December after Daniel Jones suffered a season-ending Achilles injury. He went 0-3 in those starts, throwing for 544 yards and 4 touchdowns. Not exactly a triumphant farewell, but it kept him connected to the modern game in a way most retired players aren't.

Why the Bills Are Actually Taking This Seriously

Here's the thing about Philip Rivers that gets overlooked when people laugh at this candidacy: the man is one of the most cerebral quarterbacks in NFL history. He played 18 seasons, threw for 63,984 yards (fifth all-time), accumulated 425 touchdown passes, and earned 8 Pro Bowl selections. His career passer rating of 95.2 places him among the top 10 all-time for quarterbacks with at least 100 games. He led the Chargers to six postseason appearances and four division titles. He was renowned for his pre-snap reads, his command of protections, and his ability to dissect defenses before the ball was even snapped.

Rivers himself acknowledged earlier this month that he believes he could coach at the NFL level. "I do think, as humbly as I can say it, that I could coach at this level," Rivers said. "I understand the game. I've been a leader my whole career. I know how to get the most out of people." Those aren't empty words from a guy who's delusional about his abilities. Rivers was one of the most respected leaders in every locker room he ever occupied. Teammates consistently described him as the first guy in the building and the last guy to leave. His football IQ was legendary. The question isn't whether Rivers understands football. The question is whether understanding football translates to managing an NFL franchise.

The Josh Allen Connection

Make no mistake: this interview is happening primarily because of Josh Allen. The Bills quarterback has been given significant say in who becomes the next head coach, sitting in on every interview and providing direct feedback to general manager Brandon Beane. Allen praised Rivers' recent comeback with the Colts, saying "The way that he's gone back out there... was inspiring to watch." The relationship between the two quarterbacks has developed over years of mutual respect, with Allen apparently seeing something in Rivers that transcends the traditional coaching pipeline.

It's worth noting what Allen just went through. The Bills' 33-30 overtime loss to the Denver Broncos in the Divisional Round on January 17th was devastating, with Allen committing four turnovers including an interception in overtime that essentially ended Buffalo's season. He was visibly emotional after the game, tears streaming down his face as he said he "let my teammates down tonight." That's now four straight seasons of playoff heartbreak for Allen. He needs a coach who can help him take the next step, who understands the mental burden of being a franchise quarterback, who can relate to the pressure of carrying a franchise on his back. Rivers, for all his playoff disappointments, understands that weight better than almost anyone.

From Fairhope to the NFL: The High School Years

Rivers didn't stumble into high school coaching by accident. He grew up in Decatur, Alabama, the son of Steve Rivers, an Alabama High School Athletic Association Hall of Fame coach. Philip played for his father at Athens High School before starring at NC State and being drafted fourth overall by the New York Giants in 2004 (immediately traded to the Chargers for Eli Manning in one of the most famous draft-day swaps in history). Football runs in his blood. Coaching was always the plan for after his playing days ended.

After retiring from the NFL following the 2020 season with the Colts, Rivers immediately took the head coaching job at St. Michael Catholic. His impact was immediate. The Cardinals went from a program that had never reached the state semifinals to one that reached the final four twice in his first five seasons. His 43-15 record represents a .741 winning percentage, and his players have consistently praised his ability to simplify complex concepts and get everyone on the same page. When the Colts came calling in December after Daniel Jones went down, Rivers initially hesitated. But the competitor in him couldn't resist one more chance to play, even if it meant leaving his team mid-season.

The McDermott Aftermath

To understand why the Bills are casting such a wide net, you need to understand what they're leaving behind. Sean McDermott was fired on Monday after nine seasons as head coach, ending a tenure that produced a 98-50 regular season record (.662, 15th-best in NFL history), five AFC East division titles, and eight playoff appearances in nine years. By almost any measure, McDermott was a good coach. But "good" wasn't good enough. Despite having Josh Allen, arguably the most talented quarterback in football, McDermott never got Buffalo to a Super Bowl. His playoff record of 8-8 included four consecutive seasons of January disappointment.

Bills owner Terry Pegula made it clear that the franchise had "hit the playoff wall" and needed a new voice. The devastating loss to Denver was the final straw, but the writing had been on the wall for a while. The Bills went 12-5 this season, won the AFC East yet again, and still couldn't break through when it mattered. General manager Brandon Beane has retained his job and is now tasked with finding McDermott's replacement. Beane has indicated this will be a "wide-open search," and he wasn't kidding. Former Dolphins head coach Mike McDaniel was also interviewed on Friday. Other candidates include Joe Brady (Bills OC), Brian Daboll (former Bills OC and Giants HC), Lou Anarumo (Bengals DC), Anthony Lynn, Anthony Weaver, and Grant Udinski.

The Realistic Odds

Let's be honest here: Philip Rivers is almost certainly not going to be the next head coach of the Buffalo Bills. Multiple reports have suggested he isn't a serious candidate to actually land the job. Brian Daboll, who many credit for Josh Allen's development from raw prospect to MVP candidate during his tenure as Bills offensive coordinator from 2018-2021, appears to be the frontrunner. But the fact that Rivers got an interview at all says something about the NFL's willingness to think outside the box, and about the value placed on quarterback-coach relationships in the modern game.

Rivers is 44 years old. He has nine children. He was coaching high school football in Alabama until six weeks ago. The gap between where he is and where an NFL head coach needs to be is enormous. He'd need to hire coordinators on both sides of the ball who could handle the X's and O's while he learned how to manage an NFL operation. He'd need to prove he could command respect from veteran players who made more money than he did. He'd need to navigate media obligations, salary cap management, roster construction, and a thousand other responsibilities that high school coaches never have to consider.

But What If?

Here's the fun part of this whole exercise: imagine, just for a moment, that it actually happened. Imagine Philip Rivers standing on the sideline at Highmark Stadium, headset on, calling plays for Josh Allen. Imagine two of the most passionate, emotional, fiery quarterbacks in recent NFL history working together every day. Imagine the press conferences, the sideline reactions, the father-of-nine energy permeating every aspect of the operation. It would be appointment television. It would be chaos and brilliance in equal measure. It would be, without question, the most entertaining coaching hire in NFL history.

Would it work? Probably not. Almost certainly not, if we're being realistic. But "probably not" has never stopped the NFL from trying things. Once upon a time, nobody thought a first-round quarterback could successfully transition to tight end, and then George Kittle happened. Once upon a time, nobody thought a defensive coordinator from Alaska could be a successful NFL head coach, and then Pete Carroll won a Super Bowl in Seattle. The NFL rewards innovation and punishes stagnation. Maybe, just maybe, the next great innovation is hiring a recently-retired Hall of Fame quarterback to coach a franchise that's been spinning its wheels in January for years.

The Bottom Line

Philip Rivers interviewed for the Buffalo Bills head coaching job on Friday. That sentence is real. That actually happened. Whether you think it's brilliant or insane, you have to appreciate the audacity of it all. Rivers spent 18 years as one of the most durable, intelligent, and successful quarterbacks in NFL history. He never won a Super Bowl, but he came closer than most. He retired, became a high school coach, then un-retired for three weeks to help out the Colts, and now he's interviewing to lead one of the most talented rosters in football.

Will he get the job? Almost certainly not. But the Bills took him seriously enough to bring him in. Josh Allen took him seriously enough to sit in on the interview. And somewhere in Fairhope, Alabama, a high school football team is waiting to find out if their coach is coming back next season or if he's about to become the most unconventional NFL head coach since... well, since ever. Whatever happens next, this has been one hell of a coaching search. And it's only Friday.

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NFL COACHING

Ravens Hire Jesse Minter as Head Coach: National Champion Architect Returns to Baltimore on Five-Year Deal

Posted: January 22, 2026, 6:30 PM ET

Jesse Minter looks on from the sideline as Los Angeles Chargers defensive coordinator 2025

THE HIRE: Jesse Minter, 42, becomes fourth head coach in Ravens' 31-year history | Five-year contract | Youngest and first defensive-minded HC in franchise history

THE RESUME: Chargers DC (2024-25): 5th-ranked defense | Michigan DC (2022-23): National champions | Ravens assistant (2017-20) | Worked with Lamar Jackson as rookie scout team QB

The Baltimore Ravens have found their man, and they didn't have to look far. Jesse Minter, the 42-year-old defensive coordinator who transformed the Los Angeles Chargers into one of the NFL's most fearsome units, is coming home to Baltimore on a five-year contract. The announcement, made official on Wednesday afternoon, concludes a 16-day coaching search that interviewed 16 candidates and ultimately circled back to a man who already knew the franchise's DNA intimately.

Minter becomes the fourth head coach in Ravens history and, at 42, the youngest. He's also the first whose expertise comes from the defensive side of the ball, a fitting choice for a franchise that built its identity on suffocating defense. From Ray Lewis to Ed Reed to Terrell Suggs, the Ravens have always been about making opposing quarterbacks uncomfortable. Now they've hired a man who's made that his life's work.

The Harbaugh Connection Runs Deep

You can't tell the Jesse Minter story without mentioning the name Harbaugh. Both of them, actually. Minter spent four seasons as a defensive assistant in Baltimore under John Harbaugh from 2017 to 2020, including two years as the defensive backs coach. It was during this stint that a young Lamar Jackson arrived in Baltimore as a first-round pick. Minter worked with Jackson when the future two-time MVP was running scout team as a rookie in 2018. That relationship, that institutional knowledge, matters.

After leaving Baltimore, Minter took the defensive coordinator job at Vanderbilt in 2021, then made the leap that would define his career trajectory. When Jim Harbaugh, John's brother, needed a defensive coordinator at the University of Michigan in 2022, he called Minter. What followed was nothing short of spectacular. In two seasons in Ann Arbor, Minter built the nation's top-ranked defense, culminating in Michigan's 2023 national championship, their first since 1997.

The Michigan Masterpiece

The numbers from that 2023 championship run are staggering. Michigan's defense allowed just 10.4 points per game, the best mark in the nation. They surrendered only 247.0 total yards per game, also tops in the country. The Wolverines held opponents to a 29.1% conversion rate on third down and forced 27 turnovers. When Jim Harbaugh was suspended for the first three games of the 2023 season, it was Minter who served as interim head coach for the opener against East Carolina. The Wolverines won 30-3, giving Minter his first official win as a head coach.

The Wolverines wouldn't have won that national championship without their stout defense and the creative schemes Minter threw at opposing offenses in big games. His ability to make in-game adjustments, to disguise coverages, and to put his players in position to succeed caught the attention of NFL executives across the league. When Jim Harbaugh left Michigan for the Chargers in 2024, Minter followed him to Los Angeles.

Chargers Defense: Elite in Every Metric

If the Michigan championship put Minter on the map, his two years with the Chargers proved he could do it at the highest level. In 2024, his first season in Los Angeles, the Chargers led the entire NFL in scoring defense, allowing just 17.7 points per game. Let that sink in. In a league that increasingly favors offense, Minter's unit was holding teams to fewer than 18 points a game.

The 2025 season saw the Chargers finish with the fifth-ranked defense, allowing 285.2 yards per game. Over his two-year tenure, the Chargers ranked second in the NFL in QBR allowed, third in points allowed, and seventh in yards per play. These aren't fluke numbers. This is sustained excellence against the best players in the world, week after week, month after month. The Chargers' wild-card loss to the New England Patriots this postseason ended their season, but it also freed Minter to interview with Baltimore on January 14th.

A Football Family Reunion

Football runs in Jesse Minter's blood. His father, Rick Minter, has coached for nearly 50 years, including stints as the defensive coordinator at Notre Dame (twice), head coach at Cincinnati for a decade, and linebackers coach with the Philadelphia Eagles. The Minters have coached together on the same staff at least six times throughout their careers, a testament to the trust and respect they share.

Rick Minter currently serves as the senior defensive analyst for the Chargers, meaning he worked under his own son. It's an unusual dynamic in the macho world of professional football, but it speaks to Jesse's ability to command respect regardless of familial relationships. "Jesse comes from a football family, with success at every level," Ravens GM Eric DeCosta said in his announcement statement.

The Harbaugh Era Ends After 18 Seasons

Minter inherits a franchise still processing the end of an era. John Harbaugh was fired after 18 seasons as head coach, the longest tenure in Ravens history and one of the longest in the modern NFL. His resume speaks for itself: 193 total wins, a Super Bowl XLVII victory over the San Francisco 49ers in 2012, and six playoff berths in the past eight seasons. But in the Lamar Jackson era, despite 86 regular-season wins, the Ravens managed only three playoff victories. The inability to break through in January ultimately cost Harbaugh his job.

The 2025 season encapsulated the frustration. Injuries and dysfunction saw the Ravens stumble to an 8-9 record, missing the playoffs by the narrowest of margins, a missed field goal, perhaps a questionable call, the kind of heartbreak that defines close losses. But Baltimore still has Lamar Jackson, a two-time NFL MVP entering the prime of his career. They have top-end talent as good as anybody's. What they needed was fresh perspective, new energy, and a coach who could maximize that talent. The Ravens believe Minter is that coach.

The Search That Led Home

The Ravens conducted an exhaustive search, interviewing 16 candidates in total. The second-round interviews included Miami Dolphins defensive coordinator Anthony Weaver and Buffalo Bills offensive coordinator Joe Brady, both highly regarded coaches in their own right. But when Minter came to Baltimore for his in-person interview on January 21st, the decision became clear. Here was a man who already knew the organization, who had worked with Lamar Jackson, who had proven he could build championship-caliber defenses at every level.

"I am truly honored to serve as the head coach of the Baltimore Ravens," Minter said in his first statement as the new coach. "This is an organization whose values, culture and tradition of excellence reflect everything I believe about the game of football and how it should be played." Those words carry weight coming from a man who has seen how championship programs are built, from Michigan's methodical dismantling of opponents to the Chargers' lockdown defense.

The Challenge Ahead

Make no mistake, this is a Super Bowl-or-bust job. Lamar Jackson is 28 years old, locked into a contract that makes him one of the highest-paid quarterbacks in football. The window is open. The talent is there. What's been missing is the ability to put it all together when the stakes are highest. Minter's task is to figure out why a team with this much firepower keeps coming up short in January, and to fix it.

DeCosta made the organization's expectations clear: "Jesse is a strong leader who possesses a brilliant football mind and a spirit that will resonate with our players and fan base alike." That's corporate speak for "we believe he can get us to the Super Bowl." Whether Minter can deliver on that promise remains to be seen. But his track record suggests he's up for the challenge. National championships aren't won by accident. League-leading defenses aren't built by luck. Jesse Minter has proven, time and again, that he knows how to win. Now he has five years to prove it in Baltimore.

FEDERAL TRIAL

Yasiel Puig Trial Begins: Former Dodgers Star Faces 20 Years Over Illegal Sports Betting Lies

Posted: January 20, 2026, 11:52 PM ET

Yasiel Puig federal trial illegal sports betting Los Angeles court January 2026
Los Angeles Dodgers TRIAL UNDERWAY Cincinnati Reds

CHARGES: One count of obstruction of justice (up to 10 years) | Two counts of making false statements (up to 5 years each) | Total maximum: 20 years in federal prison

THE CASE: 899 illegal sports bets | $282,900 in gambling losses | $200,000 payment to bookmaker | Trial expected to last 8-9 days before Judge Dolly Gee

The Wild Horse is finally in the starting gate, and this time there's no diamond, no cheering crowd, and no escape route. Yasiel Puig, the explosive former Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder whose cannon arm and unpredictable antics made him one of baseball's most electrifying personalities, sat in a downtown Los Angeles federal courtroom on Tuesday as jury selection began in his trial on charges that could send him to prison for up to 20 years. The charges have nothing to do with baseball. They have everything to do with what allegedly happened after the game.

Puig, now 35 years old, faces one count of obstruction of justice and two counts of making false statements to federal investigators. The charges stem from his alleged involvement in an illegal sports betting ring operated by former minor league pitcher Wayne Nix. But here's the twist that makes this case so fascinating: Puig isn't charged with actually gambling illegally. He's charged with lying about it. And according to prosecutors, he lied a lot, to a lot of different people, in a lot of different ways.

The $282,900 Problem

Let's start with the numbers, because the numbers are staggering. According to federal prosecutors, Puig began placing bets through Nix's operation in May 2019, working through an intermediary identified in court documents only as "Agent 1." In just a few weeks of betting, Puig managed to accumulate $282,900 in gambling losses. That's not a typo. Nearly $300,000 in losses in a matter of weeks. For context, Puig earned approximately $9.7 million in salary during the 2019 season alone. But losing almost $300,000 to an illegal bookmaker? That's the kind of hole that gets people's attention.

To settle part of the debt, Puig allegedly made a remarkable transaction in June 2019. He walked into a Bank of America branch in Glendale, California, withdrew $200,000 in cash, and purchased two cashier's checks for $100,000 each. The money went to settle his gambling debt with Nix's operation. But instead of walking away from the table, Puig allegedly did what every degenerate gambler in history has done: he went back for more. Once his debt was partially settled, Nix gave Puig direct access to the betting websites. Between July 4 and September 29, 2019, Puig placed 899 additional wagers on tennis, football, and basketball games.

The Critical Detail: No Baseball Bets

Here's something that might save Puig from the Pete Rose treatment, even if it doesn't save him from federal prison: prosecutors have specifically stated that none of Puig's 899 bets were on baseball games. Tennis, football, basketball. But not baseball. In the eyes of Major League Baseball, that's a crucial distinction. Betting on your own sport is the one unforgivable sin in baseball, the permanent ban written into the rulebook since the Black Sox scandal of 1919. Rose bet on baseball. Joe Jackson was banished for throwing games. But Puig, whatever else he may have done, apparently kept his gambling away from the diamond.

That doesn't make any of this okay, obviously. Illegal gambling is still illegal gambling, regardless of which sport you're betting on. And lying to federal investigators is a federal crime that carries serious consequences. But from a baseball legacy perspective, Puig's Hall of Fame case, such as it was, doesn't take the same death blow that Rose's did. Puig was never going to Cooperstown anyway, with a career .277 batting average and just 132 home runs across seven MLB seasons. But at least he won't have an asterisk next to his name for betting on his own games.

The January 2022 Interview

This is where Puig allegedly made his biggest mistake. In January 2022, federal investigators sat down with Puig to ask about his involvement in Nix's gambling operation. His lawyer was present. Investigators warned him, explicitly and clearly, that lying to federal agents is a federal crime. And then, according to prosecutors, Puig lied anyway. He told investigators he only knew "Agent 1" from baseball. He claimed he had never discussed gambling with the intermediary. Both statements were allegedly false. Prosecutors say Puig had discussed sports betting with Agent 1 "hundreds of times."

But here's what really cooked Puig's goose, according to the government: two months after that interview, in March 2022, he allegedly sent a WhatsApp audio message in which he admitted to lying during the federal interview. "I no said nothing, I not talking," Puig reportedly said in the message. That audio message, if authenticated and admitted into evidence, could be devastating. It's one thing for prosecutors to argue that someone lied. It's another thing entirely when the defendant apparently recorded himself admitting it.

The Plea Deal That Fell Apart

In August 2022, it looked like Puig was going to avoid a trial altogether. He reached a plea agreement with the U.S. Attorney's Office in Los Angeles, agreeing to plead guilty to a single count of lying to federal investigators. The deal would have required him to pay a fine of at least $55,000, pocket change for a player who earned over $50 million during his MLB career. It seemed like a reasonable resolution for everyone involved. And then Puig backed out.

"I want to clear my name," Puig said in a statement at the time. "I never should have agreed to plead guilty to a crime I did not commit." The words were defiant, but the legal strategy was risky. By rejecting the plea deal, Puig went from facing a single count with a maximum of five years to facing three counts with a combined maximum of 20 years. U.S. District Judge Dolly Gee ruled that the original plea agreement was not binding because Puig had never formally entered his guilty plea in court. The door was closed. The trial was on.

Wayne Nix: The Mastermind Who Already Folded

Wayne Nix, 49, was a former minor league pitcher who never made it to the big leagues but found another way to make money in the sports world. According to prosecutors, Nix ran an illegal sports gambling operation out of Newport Coast, California, laundering money and hiding income from the IRS. The investigation into Nix's activities began in 2017 and eventually led investigators to several high-profile clients, including Puig.

Unlike Puig, Nix didn't roll the dice on a trial. He pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to operate an illegal sports gambling business and one count of filing a false tax return. He's currently awaiting sentencing. The fact that the mastermind behind the operation has already admitted guilt puts additional pressure on Puig's defense. If the guy running the operation says it was illegal, how does Puig argue he didn't know what he was participating in?

From Havana to Hollywood to the Courthouse

The trajectory of Yasiel Puig's life reads like a movie script that took a dark turn in the third act. He defected from Cuba in 2012 after multiple failed attempts, eventually making it to Mexico and then to the United States. The Dodgers signed him to a seven-year, $42 million contract in June 2012, and he made his MLB debut on June 3, 2013. What followed was one of the most exciting rookie campaigns in recent baseball history.

Puig hit .319 with 19 home runs in his rookie season, finishing second in NL Rookie of the Year voting. He made the All-Star team in 2014 and became known for his cannon arm in right field, reckless baserunning, and bat flips that enraged opponents and delighted fans. Legendary Dodgers broadcaster Vin Scully dubbed him "The Wild Horse," a nickname that perfectly captured his untamed energy. He helped the Dodgers reach the World Series in 2017 and 2018, hitting crucial postseason home runs including a three-run blast in Game 7 of the 2018 NLCS.

The Naturalization Angle

There's another layer to this case that makes it even more complicated. Prosecutors allege that Puig also lied during his naturalization process in 2019, the same year he was allegedly placing hundreds of illegal bets. On his application for U.S. citizenship, Puig allegedly denied that he had ever gambled illegally or received income from illegal gambling. If true, that means Puig was lying to the federal government about his gambling activities at the exact same time he was allegedly making those activities.

Immigration fraud is serious business, and while Puig isn't specifically charged with it in this case, the allegation adds weight to the prosecution's narrative that Puig engaged in a pattern of deception across multiple contexts. He didn't just lie once, prosecutors are arguing. He lied systematically, repeatedly, to different agencies, for years.

What Happens Now

Jury selection was completed on Tuesday in downtown Los Angeles, with the trial expected to last approximately eight to nine days before Judge Dolly Gee. Puig appeared in court wearing a white collared shirt and blue suit, reportedly leaving the courthouse with "a big grin on his face" alongside companion Sabrina Bravom. Whether that smile lasts through the trial remains to be seen.

The prosecution will need to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Puig knowingly made false statements to federal investigators and obstructed justice. The defense will likely argue that any misstatements were the result of confusion, language barriers, or misunderstanding rather than intentional deception. Puig's Cuban heritage and English as a second language could play into that narrative. But that WhatsApp audio message, if it says what prosecutors claim it says, is going to be hard to explain away.

The Bottom Line

Yasiel Puig was one of the most talented and controversial players of his generation. He had a cannon for an arm, power from both sides of the plate, and a flair for the dramatic that made him must-watch television. But talent doesn't protect you from consequences, and controversy has a way of catching up with people. He risked his freedom to avoid admitting guilt, and now he's facing a trial that could result in decades behind bars.

The irony here is thick enough to cut. Puig built his reputation on being uncontrollable, a force of nature who played by his own rules. But in a federal courtroom, there are no bat flips, no cannon throws to home plate, no roaring crowds to feed off of. There's just the law, the evidence, and 12 jurors who will decide whether The Wild Horse finally ran out of room to roam.

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BREAKING NEWS

Jimmy Butler Tears ACL in Warriors Win Over Warriors: Season-Ending Injury Devastates Golden State's Championship Hopes

Posted: January 16, 2026, 1:16 AM ET

Jimmy Butler Golden State Warriors ACL injury torn knee 2026 season ending
Golden State Warriors SEASON OVER Miami Heat

INJURY: Torn right ACL suffered at 7:41 of third quarter vs Miami Heat | Collision with Davion Mitchell on entry pass attempt

GAME STATS: 17 points in 21 minutes before injury | Warriors won 135-112 | Butler averaging 21.3 PPG on 53% shooting in January

The best-laid plans in sports so often get destroyed by a single moment. One awkward landing. One collision that seemed routine at first glance. One scream of agony that silences an entire arena. For the Golden State Warriors, that moment came Monday night at Chase Center, and it's going to reverberate through this franchise for years to come. Jimmy Butler, the five-time All-NBA selection who was supposed to be the missing piece in Golden State's championship puzzle, has suffered a season-ending torn ACL in his right knee. The Warriors won the game 135-112. It doesn't matter. Not even a little bit.

The injury occurred at the 7:41 mark of the third quarter, and the cruelty of it all is almost poetic. the former star was facing the Miami Heat, the team that traded him to Golden State last February, the franchise where he'd made his mark as one of the league's fiercest competitors. He leaped to grab an entry pass in the middle of the paint, collided with Heat guard Davion Mitchell, and his right knee buckled on the landing. The 35-year-old crumpled to the floor immediately, grabbing his knee in obvious distress as his teammates surrounded him in stunned silence. Chase Center went from raucous to funeral quiet in the span of a single heartbeat.

The Moment Everything Changed

Butler remained down for several agonizing minutes as the Warriors' medical staff assessed the damage. When he finally got to his feet, he couldn't put any weight on his right leg. He was helped off the court slowly, laughing with nearby officials that he was owed two free throws before disappearing into the tunnel. It was classic Jimmy, trying to bring levity to a devastating situation. But everyone in the building knew this was bad. Really bad. MRI results confirmed the worst: a complete tear of the anterior cruciate ligament. Surgery is imminent. The season is over.

What makes this even more gut-wrenching is the timing. Butler had been on an absolute tear in January, averaging 21.3 points per game on 53% shooting. He'd found his rhythm in Steve Kerr's system, developing chemistry with Steph Curry and Draymond Green that was finally starting to click. The Warriors had won 12 of their last 16 games and climbed to 25-19, positioning themselves nicely for a playoff push. Everything was trending in the right direction. And now? Now the franchise has to figure out what comes next without the player they traded for specifically to compete for a championship.

A History of Knee Problems

Here's the part that's going to haunt the Warriors' front office: this isn't Butler's first significant knee injury. He suffered a meniscus tear in 2018 that required surgery. He sprained his MCL in 2024, missing time during the playoffs. The same right knee has now failed him completely at age 35. ACL tears are devastating for any player, but for a 35-year-old with a history of knee issues, the road back is going to be long and uncertain. Butler signed a two-year, $111 million extension when the trade was finalized last February. He's owed $55.5 million next season. The questions about whether he can return to All-NBA form are legitimate and uncomfortable.

Butler has always prided himself on his toughness, his ability to will himself through pain and adversity. He played through injuries in the 2023 playoffs that would have sidelined most players. He's built an entire brand around being the guy who shows up when it matters most. But an ACL tear at 35 is a different animal. The recovery timeline is typically 9-12 months, which means he'd miss the start of next season even in a best-case scenario. And at his age, there are no guarantees that the explosiveness and quickness that made him so dangerous will return to pre-injury levels.

The Trade Deadline Dilemma

General manager Mike Dunleavy now faces an extraordinarily difficult set of decisions with the February 5th trade deadline looming. The Warriors are still a good team, still capable of making noise in the playoffs with Steph Curry leading the way. But are they championship contenders without Butler? That's a much harder question to answer. Do they pivot to a full rebuild, trading away veterans for future assets? Do they stand pat and see what Curry, Green, and the supporting cast can accomplish? Or do they try to acquire another piece to fill the Butler-shaped hole in their roster?

The trade market isn't exactly flush with available stars right now. And even if Dunleavy wanted to make a splash, the Warriors' asset cupboard is relatively bare after the moves they made to acquire the former star in the first place. Andrew Wiggins is now in Miami as part of that deal. The draft capital is limited. This franchise bet big on their star being the third star who could push them over the top, and that bet just blew up in spectacular fashion. Sometimes in sports, you can do everything right and still lose. The Warriors were surging. Butler was playing his best basketball of the season. And then one awkward landing changed everything.

What Curry and Green Said

In the locker room after the game, the mood was somber despite the victory. Steph Curry, who's seen everything in his decorated career, struggled to find the right words. "We're devastated for Jimmy," Curry said. "He was playing some of his best basketball, really finding his rhythm with us. This is just cruel. There's no other word for it." Draymond Green, Butler's close friend who was instrumental in recruiting him to Golden State, was visibly emotional. "That's my brother," Green said. "We brought him here to win championships. This is supposed to be the year. I don't even know what to say right now."

Head coach Steve Kerr faced reporters with the kind of resigned sadness that comes from decades in basketball. "Jimmy is a warrior," Kerr said. "He'll attack this rehab the same way he attacks everything, with relentless determination. But that doesn't change the fact that we just lost a guy who was playing at an All-Star level, a guy we were counting on to help us compete for a title. We're going to support him through this, and we're going to figure out how to move forward. But tonight is about processing this loss, not about what comes next."

The Broader Championship Picture

Let's be honest about what this means for the Western Conference. The Warriors were never the favorites to win the title this season. OKC has been dominant. The defending champion Thunder have Shai Gilgeous-Alexander playing at an MVP level. Denver remains dangerous with Nikola Jokic. But Golden State with a healthy Jimmy Butler was a team nobody wanted to see in a playoff series. Curry in playoff mode is still one of the most terrifying forces in basketball. Butler's two-way excellence and clutch gene made them legitimately scary. That fear factor just evaporated.

Now the Warriors are a first-round exit waiting to happen. They might still make the playoffs. Curry is still Curry. Green's defense and playmaking remain elite. But in a series against a top seed, they don't have the firepower anymore. They don't have the guy who could take over in the fourth quarter when Curry is being doubled. They don't have the defensive stopper who could guard the opponent's best player while also creating his own offense. They traded for Jimmy Butler because they needed exactly what Jimmy Butler provides. And now they have nothing.

Butler's Legacy and What Comes Next

Jimmy Butler's career has been defined by overcoming adversity. The guy who was homeless as a teenager in Tomball, Texas, who walked on at Marquette, who was drafted 30th overall by the Bulls and became a superstar through sheer force of will. He's reinvented himself multiple times, from defensive specialist to primary scorer to championship-level two-way star. He dragged the Miami Heat to the 2020 Finals in the bubble with one of the most iconic playoff performances in NBA history. He's earned every dollar he's ever made through work and determination.

But this injury is a different kind of test. At 35, with a torn ACL, Butler's ability to remain an elite player is genuinely in question. Some players have come back from ACL tears at similar ages and remained productive. Many haven't. The Warriors will stand by him through the rehab process because that's what good organizations do. But the cold reality is that Butler's best basketball might already be behind him, and the championship window that seemed wide open just a few hours ago has now slammed shut.

The Bottom Line

Sometimes sports gives you moments of transcendent joy. And sometimes sports rips your heart out and stomps on it. For the Golden State Warriors and their fans, Monday night was the latter. Jimmy Butler was supposed to be the answer. He was supposed to be the guy who got them back to the mountaintop one more time before the dynasty truly ended. Instead, he's facing the longest road of his career, and the Warriors are facing an existential crisis with a championship window that just got a lot smaller.

The scoreboard said Warriors 135, Heat 112. Nobody cared about the final score. They cared about the image of their star being helped off the court, unable to put weight on his right leg, his season over before it really got started. That's the image that will define this night, this season, and possibly this era of Warriors basketball. The best-laid plans, indeed.

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BREAKING NEWS

Tennessee Titans Hire Robert Saleh as Head Coach: A Dearborn Son's Redemption Arc Begins in Nashville

Posted: January 19, 2026, 10:10 PM ET

Robert Saleh Tennessee Titans new head coach NFL 2026 49ers defensive coordinator hire
San Francisco 49ers Tennessee Titans

OFFICIAL: Robert Saleh agrees to terms as Tennessee Titans' 20th head coach | Former 49ers DC and Jets HC lands second chance after impressive defensive performance in San Francisco

KEY TASK: Develop #1 overall pick Cam Ward after rocky 3-14 rookie season | Titans scored just 16.7 PPG, their worst mark since moving to Nashville

Robert Saleh is getting another shot. The Tennessee Titans have agreed to hire the former San Francisco 49ers defensive coordinator as their next head coach, according to multiple reports on Monday night. It's a decision that represents both redemption and risk, a chance for a coach who was unceremoniously dumped by the New York Jets in October 2024 to prove that his defensive brilliance can translate into sustainable success at the highest level. And frankly? I think the Titans might have found their guy.

Here's the thing about Saleh: the guy got a raw deal in New York. Not entirely raw, mind you. His 20-36 record with the Jets isn't going to make anyone forget Vince Lombardi. But consider the circumstances. He was handed a team that had been dysfunctional for years, had to watch his franchise quarterback tear his Achilles on the fourth snap of the 2023 season, and then got fired five games into 2024 amid rumors of tension with that same quarterback's massive ego. The Jets went on to finish 3-8 after his dismissal. His replacement didn't exactly light the world on fire. Sometimes in this league, a guy just needs a fresh start with different circumstances.

The 49ers Stint Reminded Everyone Why Saleh Was So Coveted

When Saleh returned to San Francisco in January 2025, plenty of people wondered if he'd lost whatever magic he had during his first stint. After all, his Jets defenses were never elite. But the 2025 49ers silenced those doubts emphatically. Despite losing Nick Bosa to a torn ACL in Week 3 and Pro Bowl linebacker Fred Warner to a fractured ankle, Saleh's defense finished 11th in the NFL in points allowed. They had the fewest sacks in the league with just 20, but that's because Saleh adapted. He blitzed less, limited big plays, and kept his depleted unit competitive. That's coaching. That's adjusting on the fly when your best players are in walking boots on the sideline.

The Ringer ranked Saleh as the third-best head coaching candidate in the 2026 cycle, and for good reason. His defensive philosophy has evolved significantly since his first San Francisco tenure from 2017 to 2020. Back then, he ran a Seattle-inspired 4-3 Cover-3 scheme that was fairly conventional. Now? He's incorporated Wide-9 alignments, quarters-based coverage concepts, and more situational adjustments. He's learned to be multiple, to adapt his scheme to his personnel rather than stubbornly demanding his players fit a rigid system. That flexibility is exactly what the Titans need right now.

The Cam Ward Project: Saleh's Biggest Challenge

Let's be honest about what Saleh is walking into here. The Tennessee Titans were an absolute disaster in 2025. They fired Brian Callahan after a 1-5 start just five weeks into the season, finished 3-14, and averaged a pathetic 16.7 points per game, their second-worst offensive output since relocating to Nashville in 1997. Their first-round investment, #1 overall pick Cam Ward, had an up-and-down rookie season that saw him complete 59.8% of his passes for 3,169 yards with 15 touchdowns and 7 interceptions. His QBR of 33.3 ranked 28th in the league. Not exactly setting the world on fire, but not a complete catastrophe either.

The encouraging news? Ward actually improved as the season progressed. After the bye week, with the coaching staff stabilizing somewhat under interim head coach Mike McCoy, Ward posted a 10:1 touchdown-to-interception ratio over the final eight games. He surpassed Marcus Mariota's franchise rookie record of 2,818 passing yards and became the first Titans rookie quarterback to throw for 3,000 yards in a season. The kid has talent. He started all 17 games despite taking an absolute beating behind a porous offensive line that allowed 55 sacks. That durability matters. That resilience matters. Saleh's first priority will be finding an offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach who can unlock Ward's potential, because the defensive-minded Saleh knows he's not the guy to do that himself.

A Story That Transcends Football

I want to take a moment to acknowledge what this hiring means beyond the X's and O's. Robert Saleh is the first Muslim head coach in NFL history. He's the son of Lebanese immigrants who raised him in Dearborn, Michigan, a Detroit suburb with the largest Arab-American population in the country. His father, Sam, played at Eastern Michigan before a knee injury ended his pro career with the Chicago Bears. Three of his uncles played on Northern Michigan's 1975 national championship team. Football is in his blood, but his journey to this moment wasn't always linear.

After graduating from Northern Michigan with a finance degree, Saleh was working as a financial credit analyst in Detroit when his older brother narrowly escaped the South Tower of the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001. That experience shook him to his core. The following February, one day after Super Bowl 36, Saleh sobbed uncontrollably during a phone call to his brother, confessing that he could no longer ignore his passion for football. He walked away from the stability of finance to pursue coaching, starting at the bottom. He was a defensive quality control coach for the Seahawks from 2011 to 2013, part of the Super Bowl XLVIII winning staff. He spent three years as linebackers coach in Jacksonville. He earned his coordinator shot in San Francisco in 2017. And now, at 46 years old, he's getting a second chance to prove he can lead a franchise.

What Changes This Time?

Here's the most interesting detail from reports about Saleh's interviews: he indicated to teams that he plans to call defensive plays as a head coach this time around. He didn't do that with the Jets, delegating that responsibility to his coordinators. Saleh has apparently recognized that his greatest strength is his defensive acumen, and he's willing to be more hands-on in that area. Whether that's the right call remains to be seen. Plenty of successful head coaches delegate play-calling entirely. But Saleh watched his Jets defenses underperform despite having solid personnel, and he seems determined to have more direct control over that side of the ball in Tennessee.

The Titans' defense actually had some bright spots in 2025. They recorded 56 sacks, which was solid. But they also gave up 55 touchdowns and allowed opponents to accumulate 5,867 total yards. The pass defense was particularly problematic, surrendering 4,221 yards through the air. There's talent on this roster, but it needs direction. Saleh's 4-3 Wide-9 scheme could be particularly effective if he can identify the right edge rushers to make it work. Tennessee's going to need some draft capital invested on that side of the ball, but the foundation is there for improvement.

The Bottom Line

General manager Mike Borgonzi interviewed 16 candidates for this job. He could have gone with a safer retread or taken a swing on an unproven coordinator. Instead, he chose Robert Saleh, a coach with head coaching experience who still has something to prove, who understands what went wrong in New York and appears determined to correct those mistakes. The Titans are rebuilding around a young quarterback with obvious potential but equally obvious flaws. They're coming off back-to-back losing seasons for the first time since 2015-16. They need stability, identity, and a leader who can command respect in the locker room.

Saleh might not be the sexiest hire. His 20-36 record with the Jets isn't going to make anyone forget Bill Belichick. But there's something to be said for a guy who's been through the fire, who's learned from his mistakes, who's eager to prove that his first head coaching stint doesn't define his ceiling as a leader. The Tennessee Titans are betting that Robert Saleh's best coaching is still ahead of him. Given what he showed in San Francisco this year with a decimated roster, I'm inclined to agree. This is going to be fascinating to watch.

BREAKING NEWS

Buffalo Bills Fire Sean McDermott After Nine Seasons: The End of an Era That Never Reached the Promised Land

Posted: January 19, 2026, 2:30 PM ET

Sean McDermott Buffalo Bills head coach fired 2026 NFL coaching news Josh Allen
Buffalo Bills FIRED Buffalo Bills

OFFICIAL: Sean McDermott fired as Bills head coach after 9 seasons | Decision made 48 hours after divisional round OT loss to Denver Broncos

CAREER: 98-50 regular season (.662) | 8-8 playoffs | 5 AFC East titles | 8 playoff appearances | 0 Super Bowls

It's over in Buffalo. The Sean McDermott era, which began with so much promise in 2017 and reached heights this franchise hadn't seen since the glory days of Marv Levy, has come to an unceremonious end. The Buffalo Bills fired their head coach on Monday, less than 48 hours after a gut-wrenching 33-30 overtime loss to the Denver Broncos in the divisional round of the playoffs. Nine seasons. Ninety-eight regular season wins. Five AFC East division titles. Zero Super Bowl appearances. That's the legacy Sean McDermott leaves behind, and for owner Terry Pegula, it simply wasn't enough anymore.

Look, I'm not going to sit here and pretend this wasn't a complicated decision. McDermott transformed the Bills from a laughingstock franchise that hadn't made the playoffs in 17 years into perennial contenders. He developed Josh Allen from a raw, cannon-armed project into the reigning NFL MVP. He created a culture of accountability and toughness in a city that desperately craves football success. But here's the brutal truth: in the NFL, you're ultimately judged by championships. And McDermott's Bills, despite all those division titles and playoff appearances, never got to the Super Bowl. Not once. The Kansas City Chiefs knocked them out twice in AFC Championship Games. The Bengals did it once. And now Denver, with a rookie quarterback who broke his ankle on the final play, delivered the knockout blow that ended McDermott's tenure.

The Numbers Tell a Story of Regular Season Excellence and Playoff Heartbreak

Let's put McDermott's tenure in proper perspective, because the numbers are genuinely remarkable when you focus on the regular season. His 98-50 record represents a .662 winning percentage, the 15th-best in NFL history among coaches with at least 100 games. Only the Kansas City Chiefs won more games than the Bills during the McDermott era. He led Buffalo to seven consecutive double-digit win seasons, including two 13-win campaigns in 2022 and 2024 that tied the franchise record. The Bills reached the playoffs in eight of his nine seasons, missing only once in 2018. That's sustained excellence by any measure.

But the playoff numbers paint a different picture. McDermott went 8-8 in the postseason. He's the only coach in NFL history to win a playoff game in six consecutive years without reaching the Super Bowl. Think about that for a second. Six straight years of winning at least one playoff game, and not a single trip to the big dance. The Bills amassed 91 victories, including playoffs, from 2019 through 2025, the most over a seven-season span without a Super Bowl appearance in league history. At some point, the close calls and heartbreaking losses pile up, and ownership has to ask whether a change is needed to get over the hump. Terry Pegula clearly decided the answer was yes.

The Overtime Demons: McDermott's Achilles Heel

Here's a stat that might explain this firing more than any other: Sean McDermott went 0-3 in postseason overtime games during his Bills career. Zero for three. That includes the infamous "13 Seconds" game against Kansas City in January 2022, when Patrick Mahomes drove the Chiefs into field goal range in the final 13 seconds of regulation before Kansas City won in overtime. It includes the AFC Championship loss to the Chiefs the following year. And now it includes Saturday's loss to Denver, when the Broncos' defense forced four Josh Allen turnovers and ultimately won on a field goal set up by Ja'Quan McMillian's interception in overtime.

Three times McDermott's Bills had a chance to advance in overtime. Three times they failed. You can argue about luck, about bounces, about circumstances. But when you're 0-3 in the biggest moments, ownership starts wondering if there's something systemic going on. Are the players not prepared? Is the coaching staff making the wrong adjustments? Is there a mental block that kicks in when the stakes are highest? We may never know the exact answer, but Pegula saw enough to make a change.

The Loss That Broke the Camel's Back

Saturday's divisional round loss to Denver was particularly painful because of how it unfolded. Josh Allen, the reigning NFL MVP who had been nearly unstoppable all season, had one of the worst games of his career. Two interceptions. Two lost fumbles. Four turnovers total against a Broncos defense that made him look mortal for the first time in months. Denver's defensive coordinator Vance Joseph, the former head coach who was once considered a laughingstock, schemed up a game plan that completely flustered Allen. And when the final whistle blew, Allen was inconsolable at the podium, tears streaming down his face as he blamed himself for the loss.

McDermott defended Allen afterward, insisting the loss wasn't on his quarterback. But that's almost the point, isn't it? When your franchise quarterback, the guy you've built everything around, has his worst game of the season in the most important game of the year, questions arise about preparation and game planning. Did the coaching staff have Allen ready for what Denver was going to throw at him? Were the right adjustments made at halftime? These are the questions that haunt you when you lose in overtime for the third time in the playoffs.

From Omaha to NFL Coaching Legend: McDermott's Journey

Sean Michael McDermott's football journey is a testament to determination and evolution. Born in Omaha, Nebraska in 1974, he was a two-time national prep wrestling champion at La Salle College High School before playing safety at the College of William and Mary, where he was teammates with future Steelers head coach Mike Tomlin. His coaching career began as a graduate assistant at William and Mary in 1998 before he joined the Philadelphia Eagles in 1999, where he spent 12 years working his way from scouting coordinator to defensive coordinator under Andy Reid.

The Carolina Panthers hired McDermott as their defensive coordinator in 2011, reuniting him with head coach Ron Rivera. Over five seasons in Carolina, McDermott built one of the NFL's most fearsome defenses, coaching Luke Kuechly to Defensive Rookie of the Year and Defensive Player of the Year honors. The Panthers went 15-1 in 2015 and reached Super Bowl 50, where McDermott's defense held the Denver Broncos' offense to just one touchdown. That championship experience, even in a losing effort, prepared him for the Bills job he'd accept in January 2017.

Josh Allen's Future: A New Coach for the First Time

The most significant ramification of McDermott's firing is what it means for Josh Allen. The 29-year-old quarterback, entering his ninth NFL season, has never played for another head coach. McDermott was the guy who drafted him, developed him, believed in him when the analytics community said he was a mistake. Allen's ascension from erratic gunslinger to the best quarterback in football happened under McDermott's watch. Now Allen has to adjust to a new voice, a new system, a new approach. That's not nothing for a player who's won eight playoff games, the most by any quarterback without a Super Bowl start in the Super Bowl era.

The good news for Allen? He's still in his prime, and the Bills organization is committed to winning now. Terry Pegula made it clear that general manager Brandon Beane, who's being promoted to President of Football Operations, will lead the search for a new coach. Beane and Allen have a strong relationship. The next hire will be someone who can maximize Allen's talent while perhaps bringing a fresh perspective to the playoff failures that plagued McDermott. Whether that's an offensive innovator like Joe Brady (currently Buffalo's OC), a proven winner like Brian Flores, or a hot coordinator from elsewhere, Allen's input will matter.

The Replacement Candidates: Who Could Be Next?

The Bills' coaching search begins immediately, and the timing is interesting because most of the top candidates have already found new homes. John Harbaugh went to the Giants. Kevin Stefanski landed in Atlanta. That means Buffalo will likely be looking at coordinator-level candidates or coaches currently employed elsewhere. Joe Brady, the Bills' offensive coordinator, has already interviewed with Miami for their opening and could be a candidate internally. Brian Flores, Minnesota's defensive coordinator, is another name to watch since he was a head coach with the Dolphins and deserves another shot.

Don't sleep on the Brian Daboll reunion narrative either. Daboll was Buffalo's offensive coordinator from 2018 to 2021, the years when Josh Allen made his leap from project to superstar. He left to become the Giants' head coach, where things haven't gone well. If Daboll becomes available, would the Bills consider bringing back the architect of Allen's development? Stranger things have happened. Other names floating around include Klint Kubiak (Seahawks OC), Mike LaFleur (Rams OC), and even potentially Mike Tomlin, who stepped down in Pittsburgh, though Tomlin has said he doesn't want to coach in 2026.

The Owner's Statement: Reading Between the Lines

"Sean has done an admirable job of leading our football team for the past nine seasons," Terry Pegula said in his statement announcing the firing. "But I feel we are in need of a new structure within our leadership to give this organization the best opportunity to take our team to the next level." Notice the careful wording there. Pegula didn't say McDermott failed. He didn't criticize the job performance. He simply said they need "new structure" to reach "the next level." Translation: we've hit our ceiling with this coach, and we need someone who can break through it.

The promotion of Brandon Beane to President of Football Operations is significant too. It signals continuity in the front office even as the coaching staff changes. Beane and McDermott came to Buffalo together in 2017, having worked together previously in Carolina. Their partnership produced those 98 regular season wins, those five division titles, all that success that fell just short. Now Beane will be tasked with finding a new coaching partner, someone who can take the roster he's built and finally get to the Super Bowl. That's a tall order, but Beane's track record suggests he's up for the challenge.

McDermott's Next Chapter: He's Not Done

Sean McDermott reportedly told his staff on Monday that he intends to continue coaching. At 51 years old, he's got plenty of gas left in the tank. His resume speaks for itself: 98 regular season wins, a .662 winning percentage, and a proven ability to build winning cultures. There are currently eight NFL teams with head coaching vacancies including Miami, Tennessee, Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Las Vegas, Arizona, Cleveland, and now technically Buffalo. McDermott could be an attractive option for any of those franchises looking for stability and proven success.

The irony is that McDermott might end up facing his former team in the playoffs somewhere down the line. He'll carry the lessons learned from those Buffalo years, both the triumphs and the heartbreaks. He'll know what it feels like to build something special and have it fall just short. And he'll be hungry to prove that those playoff failures weren't about his coaching, but about circumstances beyond his control. Don't be surprised if Sean McDermott wins a Super Bowl somewhere else before all is said and done. Coaches with his track record usually get second chances, and sometimes those second chances produce championships.

The Bottom Line: The Right Call at the Wrong Time?

Was firing Sean McDermott the right decision? Reasonable people can disagree. On one hand, you're letting go of a coach with the 15th-best winning percentage in NFL history, a guy who turned your franchise around and made it respectable. On the other hand, you're nine years in with zero Super Bowl appearances, and at some point, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing and expecting different results. Terry Pegula clearly decided that the Bills needed a new voice, a new approach, a new perspective to finally break through. Whether that decision looks brilliant or foolish will depend entirely on who they hire next.

For Bills fans, this is a moment of profound uncertainty. McDermott was the guy who ended the playoff drought. He was the guy who believed in Josh Allen when nobody else did. He was the guy who made Buffalo a destination instead of a punchline. Now he's gone, and the search for his replacement begins. The Pegulas have bet that there's someone out there who can do what McDermott couldn't: win a Super Bowl in Western New York. For the sake of one of the NFL's most passionate fanbases, let's hope they're right. Because if they're wrong, this firing will be remembered as the moment the Bills let a good thing slip away in pursuit of perfection.

Related Coverage: Today's NFL Analysis | Latest Picks | Handicapping Hub


BREAKING NEWS

Atlanta Falcons Finalize Deal to Hire Kevin Stefanski as Head Coach: Two-Time Coach of the Year Gets Fresh Start in NFC South

Posted: January 17, 2026, 10:44 PM ET

Kevin Stefanski Cleveland Browns head coach NFL coaching hire Atlanta Falcons
Cleveland Browns → ATL Atlanta Falcons

OFFICIAL: Kevin Stefanski agrees to five-year deal as 20th head coach in Falcons franchise history | Two-time NFL Coach of the Year (2020, 2023)

CAREER: 45-56 with Browns (6 seasons) | 14 years with Vikings (2006-2019) | QB coach, OC, multiple staff roles

The Atlanta Falcons have their man. After conducting one of the most exhaustive coaching searches in recent memory, interviewing everyone from Mike McDaniel to John Harbaugh to Jesse Minter, Atlanta has landed on Kevin Stefanski as the 20th head coach in franchise history. The two-time NFL Coach of the Year is getting a fresh start in the NFC South, and honestly, this might be exactly what both parties needed. Sometimes a change of scenery is the best medicine for everyone involved.

Stefanski was fired by the Cleveland Browns on January 5th after six seasons at the helm, posting a 45-56 overall record that doesn't come close to telling the whole story. This is a coach who won Coach of the Year in back-to-back seasons when his team was healthy, in 2020 and 2023. He took a Browns franchise that had been an absolute laughingstock for two decades and made them relevant again. The fact that Cleveland moved on from him says more about the dysfunction in that organization than it does about Stefanski's coaching ability. The Falcons just got a steal.

The Interview Gauntlet: Atlanta Didn't Rush This Decision

Let's give the Falcons credit here, they did their homework. The list of candidates Atlanta spoke with reads like a who's who of coaching talent. They talked to Mike McDaniel, who's turned Miami into one of the most electric offenses in football. They pursued John Harbaugh, fresh off his firing in Baltimore. They interviewed Jesse Minter, the defensive coordinator who helped Michigan win a national championship. Jeff Hafley. Antonio Pierce. Aden Durde. Joe Brady. Ejiro Evero. The Falcons cast a wide net, spoke to anyone who might be the answer, and ultimately circled back to the guy with two Coach of the Year trophies sitting on his mantle.

What stood out about Stefanski during the process, according to sources close to the search, was his offensive vision and his track record of developing quarterbacks. That matters enormously in Atlanta right now because the quarterback situation is, well, complicated. More on that in a moment. But Stefanski spent 14 years in Minnesota before landing in Cleveland, working his way up from assistant quarterbacks coach to offensive coordinator. He coached Kirk Cousins in Minnesota. He knows this division. He knows these weapons. There's a reason Atlanta felt comfortable pulling the trigger.

The Quarterback Situation: Penix Down, Cousins Complicated

Here's where things get interesting for Stefanski in Atlanta. Michael Penix Jr., the quarterback the Falcons shocked everyone by drafting eighth overall in 2024, tore his ACL and is done for the foreseeable future. That's a devastating blow for a young franchise quarterback who showed flashes of brilliance. Meanwhile, Kirk Cousins is still on the roster with a contract that carries a $57 million cap hit. Cousins, the guy Stefanski coached to a Pro Bowl in Minnesota back in 2019. You can't make this stuff up.

Stefanski's background as a quarterback developer might be exactly what Atlanta needs to navigate this mess. He turned Baker Mayfield into a competent starter in Cleveland before Deshaun Watson arrived. He helped Cousins have his best statistical seasons in Minnesota. The man knows how to scheme for his personnel and put his signal-caller in position to succeed. Whether that's rehabbing Penix, working with an aging Cousins, or finding someone else entirely, Stefanski has the offensive chops to figure it out.

The Pieces Are There: Bijan Robinson and Drake London Await

Let's talk about the good stuff, because there's plenty of it. Bijan Robinson just had one of the greatest seasons by a running back in NFL history. The former Texas star racked up 1,478 rushing yards and added another 777 receiving yards for 2,255 total yards from scrimmage. That's absurd. Robinson is a legitimate offensive weapon who can carry a scheme, and Stefanski loves to run the football. In Cleveland, when Nick Chubb was healthy, Stefanski's offense was built around the ground game. Imagine what he can do with a talent like Robinson who's even more versatile than Chubb ever was.

Then there's Drake London, who's quietly developed into one of the better young receivers in the league. In 12 games this season, London hauled in 68 catches for 919 yards and 7 touchdowns. The dude is 6'4" with contested-catch ability that makes him a nightmare in the red zone. Kyle Pitts is still there at tight end, even if he hasn't lived up to the draft hype. The offensive line needs work, sure, but the skill position talent? That's not the problem. Stefanski is walking into a situation with real weapons. He just needs to figure out who's throwing them the ball.

The Matt Ryan Factor: A Legend Returns in a New Role

Here's a fascinating subplot to this whole thing. Matt Ryan, the greatest quarterback in Falcons history, was recently named president of football operations for the organization. Matty Ice is back in Atlanta, just not on the field. He's now part of the decision-making apparatus that brought Stefanski in. Ryan knows what it takes to win in this city. He knows the expectations of the fanbase. He knows the NFC South. Having him involved in building out this coaching staff and shaping the roster could be a huge advantage for Stefanski as he gets acclimated.

The Falcons haven't won a playoff game since the 2016 season, the year of the infamous Super Bowl LI collapse against New England. That's eight years of playoff futility for a franchise that was supposed to be on the cusp of a dynasty. Arthur Blank has been patient. He's given coaches time. But the patience is wearing thin, and bringing in someone like Stefanski signals a new era of accountability. This isn't a development project anymore. This is a "win now" hire, even if the roster needs some work.

Why Cleveland Let Him Go: A Cautionary Tale

So why did the Browns move on? The easy answer is the 45-56 record. The real answer is far more complicated. Cleveland gave Stefanski an impossible situation with Deshaun Watson. They traded three first-round picks and gave Watson a fully guaranteed $230 million contract, and the guy has been an unmitigated disaster on the field when he's even been healthy enough to play. Stefanski went to the playoffs in 2020 with Baker Mayfield. He won Coach of the Year twice. And then ownership saddled him with a quarterback who hasn't looked like himself since the trade, and blamed Stefanski when it didn't work.

The Browns are going to regret this decision. Mark my words. Stefanski is a good coach, maybe a great one, who got caught up in a terrible roster construction decision that was made above his pay grade. Now Atlanta gets to reap the benefits. They're getting a guy who's learned from those mistakes, who's hungry to prove the doubters wrong, and who's walking into a situation with way more offensive talent than he ever had in Cleveland's best years.

What Comes Next: Building the Staff and Fixing the Roster

Stefanski's first order of business will be assembling a coaching staff. He's expected to call some of his former colleagues from both Cleveland and Minnesota, though specific names haven't emerged yet. The defensive coordinator hire will be particularly important because Stefanski is an offensive mind. He needs someone he trusts on the other side of the ball to complement his scheme. The Falcons ranked middle of the pack defensively this season, and there's room for improvement across the board.

The roster itself needs some massaging too. The offensive line was a problem this year. The secondary could use an upgrade. And that quarterback situation isn't going to solve itself overnight. But the foundation is there. Bijan Robinson is a franchise cornerstone. Drake London and Kyle Pitts give you playmaking ability at the skill positions. The Falcons have some cap space to work with and draft picks to deploy. Stefanski isn't inheriting a disaster. He's inheriting a team that's maybe two or three pieces away from being a legitimate contender.

The Bottom Line: A Win for Atlanta

This is a smart hire for the Falcons. Kevin Stefanski has proven he can coach at the highest level. He's won the most prestigious individual award in coaching twice. He took one of the NFL's most cursed franchises to the playoffs and won a game there. He's developed quarterbacks, built creative offenses, and earned the respect of players everywhere he's been. Cleveland's loss is Atlanta's gain, and the NFC South just got a lot more interesting.

The Falcons haven't had this kind of coaching pedigree since Mike Smith was winning double-digit games annually in the early 2010s. Stefanski brings credibility, he brings experience, and he brings a chip on his shoulder after being shown the door in Cleveland. If the quarterback situation sorts itself out, and there's reason to believe Stefanski is the guy to sort it out, Atlanta could be back in the playoff conversation sooner than anyone expects. The NFC South is wide open after Tampa Bay's dominance faded. Why not the Falcons?

BREAKING NEWS

Bo Nix Out for Season After Ankle Injury in Broncos' Overtime Playoff Win

Posted: January 17, 2026, 6:29 PM ET

Bo Nix Denver Broncos quarterback celebrates touchdown pass playoff win Bills
Denver Broncos SEASON OVER Buffalo Bills

INJURY: Fractured right ankle suffered during kneel down to set up game-winning FG | Surgery scheduled in Birmingham, AL

GAME STATS: 26/46, 279 yards, 3 TDs in 33-30 OT win vs Bills | Jarrett Stidham to start AFC Championship

The Denver Broncos are heading to the AFC Championship Game. But they're doing it without the quarterback who got them there. In a cruel twist of fate, Bo Nix suffered a fractured right ankle on the final plays of overtime in Denver's thrilling 33-30 victory over the Buffalo Bills, and head coach Sean Payton has confirmed that Nix's season is over.

The injury occurred as the Broncos were setting up for the game-winning field goal attempt. During the kneel down to center the ball for kicker Wil Lutz, Nix's ankle was stepped on. It didn't look like much in real time, nobody on the field seemed to notice, and Nix never left the game. He even conducted his postgame interview on the field with CBS as if nothing was wrong. But the pain was there, and subsequent X-rays revealed the devastating truth: a fractured ankle that will require surgery.

A Heroic Performance in His Final Game

Nix was sensational in what turned out to be his final game of the 2025 season. The rookie signal-caller completed 26 of 46 passes for 279 yards and three touchdowns, leading Denver on multiple clutch drives against one of the AFC's most dangerous teams. He didn't flinch when Josh Allen and the Bills kept answering. He just kept delivering. The performance was everything Broncos fans had hoped for when they drafted him, and it's what makes this news so utterly heartbreaking.

The Broncos' defense deserves massive credit too, forcing five turnovers including four from Allen, who threw two costly interceptions. Ja'Quan McMillian's overtime pick set up the game-winner. But the story everyone will remember is Nix, standing at the podium with an ankle that was already broken, talking about how proud he was of his team. He didn't even know yet. That's the kind of toughness this kid has.

Stidham Steps Into the Spotlight

Now the Broncos turn to backup quarterback Jarrett Stidham for the AFC Championship Game on January 25th against either the Patriots or Texans. Payton expressed confidence in his backup, saying "I've got a No. 2 that's capable of starting for a number of teams." Stidham hasn't started a game in over two years, but he'll need to be ready for the biggest game of his career.

First Playoff Win in a Decade

This was Denver's first playoff win in a decade, since that legendary January 24, 2016 AFC Championship when Peyton Manning outdueled Tom Brady. The Broncos finished the regular season 14-3 and earned the AFC's top seed with home-field advantage throughout. Everything was set up perfectly for a Super Bowl run. And now? They'll have to try to get there without the guy who brought the magic back to Mile High.

Nix will undergo surgery in Birmingham, Alabama in the coming days. The Broncos' Super Bowl LX hopes now rest on Stidham's shoulders. Denver's vaunted defense gives them a fighting chance, but losing your starting quarterback in the divisional round, after a win like that, on a play that should've been nothing? That's the kind of gut punch that stays with a franchise for years.

For Bo Nix, the 2025 season ends with a playoff victory and a legacy already cemented. He led a franchise out of the wilderness and back into contention. That ankle will heal. And when it does, Denver will be waiting for him to pick up right where he left off.

John Harbaugh Signs Five-Year, $100 Million Deal With New York Giants: A Super Bowl Champion Returns to Restore a Fallen Franchise

Posted: January 17, 2026, 1:04 PM ET

John Harbaugh New York Giants head coach 2026 NFL coaching hire Baltimore Ravens Super Bowl champion
Baltimore Ravens → NYG New York Giants

OFFICIAL: John Harbaugh agrees to 5-year, $100 million contract to become Giants head coach | Press conference set for Tuesday

CAREER: 180-113 with Ravens (18 seasons) | Super Bowl XLVII Champion | 2019 NFL Coach of the Year | 12 playoff appearances

The New York Giants have finally done something right. After nearly a decade of coaching carousel chaos that would make a merry-go-round operator dizzy, Big Blue has landed the biggest fish in the 2026 coaching cycle. John Harbaugh, the Super Bowl-winning former Baltimore Ravens head coach, has agreed to a five-year, $100 million contract to take over a franchise desperately in need of stability, credibility, and someone who actually knows how to win football games. This isn't just a hire. This is a statement. This is the Giants saying, "We're done messing around."

The deal was finalized Saturday afternoon after days of negotiations that apparently weren't as smooth as everyone hoped. NFL Network reported that the two sides verbally agreed late Wednesday night, but then spent Thursday, Friday, and part of Saturday hammering out the details of what's become one of the most lucrative coaching contracts in league history. At $20 million per year, Harbaugh ties Andy Reid for the highest-paid head coach in the NFL. And honestly? The Giants should be thrilled to pay it. What's the alternative, another four years of Brian Daboll-level mediocrity?

Why This Hire Matters: A Franchise in Freefall

Let's put the Giants' recent history in perspective, because it's genuinely shocking how far this proud franchise has fallen. Since Tom Coughlin resigned after the 2015 season, New York has had four full-time head coaches and two interim coaches. They've posted a combined 44-104-1 record. That's a .298 winning percentage. That's not just bad. That's historically embarrassing for a franchise that has won four Super Bowls. The Giants haven't won a playoff game since Super Bowl XLVI in February 2012. Fourteen years without a postseason victory. The youngest Giants fan who remembers the good times is now old enough to vote.

Harbaugh represents something the Giants haven't had in years: a proven winner who commands respect. This isn't some hot coordinator who's never been a head coach. This isn't a retread who flamed out somewhere else. This is a guy who won 180 regular-season games in Baltimore, reached 12 playoffs, made four AFC Championship Games, and hoisted the Lombardi Trophy in 2013. He's the only head coach in NFL history to win a playoff game in each of his first five seasons. He owns the record for most road playoff wins by a head coach with eight. John Harbaugh has done it all. Now he's bringing that experience to East Rutherford.

The End in Baltimore: Why the Ravens Moved On

Here's the thing that makes this hire even more fascinating: John Harbaugh didn't leave Baltimore on his own terms. The Ravens fired him on January 6, 2026, after an 8-9 season that saw them miss the playoffs for only the fourth time in his 18-year tenure. Baltimore finished with a 3-6 home record at M&T Bank Stadium, the worst in franchise history. After years of deep playoff runs and Lamar Jackson MVP seasons, the Ravens stumbled to a finish that owner Steve Bisciotti simply couldn't accept.

But was that firing justified? That's the question that makes Harbaugh's arrival in New York so intriguing. Eighteen seasons is an eternity in the NFL. Only Bill Belichick has had a longer continuous run with one franchise in the modern era. Harbaugh took over a 5-11 team in 2008 and immediately made the playoffs. He won a Super Bowl in his fifth season. He developed two different franchise quarterbacks in Joe Flacco and Lamar Jackson. One bad year, and suddenly he's out? That says more about Baltimore's impatience than Harbaugh's abilities. The Giants are getting a coach who was basically fired for having one mediocre season after 17 good ones.

What Harbaugh Inherits: More Talent Than You Think

The Giants aren't a complete rebuild project. They've got pieces. Jaxson Dart showed real promise at quarterback as a rookie, flashing the arm talent that made him a first-round pick. Running back Cam Skattebo is a bowling ball who can move the chains. Wide receiver Malik Nabers is already one of the best young pass-catchers in football. Andrew Thomas remains one of the better left tackles in the game when healthy. On defense, Dexter Lawrence is a Pro Bowl nose tackle, and the team just added Brian Burns and Abdul Carter to bolster the pass rush.

The problem hasn't been talent. The problem has been coaching, development, and organizational dysfunction. Harbaugh fixes all three. He's built a reputation as someone who can maximize the potential of the players he has while developing young talent into stars. Remember, he turned an unknown Delaware quarterback named Joe Flacco into a Super Bowl MVP. He helped Lamar Jackson become the youngest unanimous MVP in NFL history. If anyone can unlock Jaxson Dart's full potential, it's John Harbaugh.

Todd Monken Coming Along for the Ride

Perhaps the most important detail of this hire is who Harbaugh is bringing with him. Todd Monken, who served as Baltimore's offensive coordinator for the past three seasons, is reportedly expected to join Harbaugh's staff in New York. This is huge. Monken is one of the most creative offensive minds in football. He helped design the Ravens' explosive offense that featured Lamar Jackson and Derrick Henry. Before Baltimore, he coordinated Georgia's national championship-winning offense. Having Monken already in place means the Giants won't have to wait for Harbaugh to find his footing schematically.

The Harbaugh-Monken partnership gives the Giants instant offensive credibility. Dart will have a coordinator who knows how to build an offense around a quarterback's strengths rather than forcing him into a system that doesn't fit. The combination of Harbaugh's defensive background and Monken's offensive innovation could create something special. For the first time in years, there's a real plan in East Rutherford. A real vision. Real hope.

The Competition: Falcons and Titans Came Up Short

The Giants beat out serious competition to land Harbaugh. The Atlanta Falcons were reportedly in the mix, offering the chance to work with Kirk Cousins and a roster that made the playoffs this year. The Tennessee Titans had an intriguing young core and were willing to pay whatever it took. Multiple sources indicated there were at least five teams interested in Harbaugh's services. He could have gone anywhere. He chose New York.

Why the Giants? Harbaugh has reportedly been given more organizational power than any Giants head coach in recent memory. While the team traditionally has the head coach report to the general manager, Harbaugh will have significant input on personnel decisions. He's not just coaching the team. He's helping shape it. For a control-oriented coach who spent 18 years building a culture in Baltimore, that level of authority was essential. The Giants didn't just give Harbaugh a paycheck. They gave him the keys to the franchise.

The Super Bowl Factor: Been There, Won That

There's something to be said for hiring a coach who has actually won it all. John Harbaugh knows what it takes to win a Super Bowl. He's been through the pressure, the scrutiny, the playoff gauntlet. On February 3, 2013, he led the Ravens to a 34-31 victory over the San Francisco 49ers in Super Bowl XLVII, the famous "Harbaugh Bowl" against his brother Jim. Joe Flacco threw three touchdown passes. The lights went out for 34 minutes. And when it was over, John Harbaugh had a championship ring on his finger.

That experience matters. The Giants haven't won a playoff game since Eli Manning hoisted the Lombardi Trophy 14 years ago. They need someone who can change the culture, who can instill a winning mentality, who has the credibility to demand excellence because he's proven he can deliver it. John Harbaugh is that guy. When he walks into the locker room at MetLife Stadium for the first time, every player will know they're being coached by a champion. That counts for something.

Age Is Just a Number: Harbaugh Has Plenty Left

Some people might point to Harbaugh's age as a concern. At 63, he's not exactly a young coach on the rise. But look around the NFL. Andy Reid is 67 and just won back-to-back Super Bowls with the Chiefs. Bill Belichick coached until he was 71. Pete Carroll was 72 when he left Seattle. The best coaches don't age out of the profession. They evolve. They adapt. They find new ways to win. Harbaugh has shown throughout his career that he's capable of reinventing his approach. He's not stuck in the past. He's still learning, still growing, still hungry.

A five-year deal takes Harbaugh through the 2030 season. That's enough time to completely transform this franchise. The Giants aren't looking for a quick fix. They're looking for sustained excellence. They're looking for someone who can build something that lasts. John Harbaugh has done that before in Baltimore. There's no reason to believe he can't do it again in New York. The man still has plenty of juice left.

What It Means for the NFC East: A New Threat Emerges

The Philadelphia Eagles should be nervous. The Dallas Cowboys should be nervous. The Washington Commanders should be nervous. The NFC East has been dominated by Philadelphia and Dallas for years, with the Giants serving as a doormat. That changes now. Harbaugh immediately makes New York a more credible threat. He's faced the toughest division in football for 18 years. He knows how to prepare for rivalry games. He knows how to build teams that can compete week in and week out against elite competition.

Will the Giants win the division in 2026? Probably not. Building a championship-caliber roster takes time. But the trajectory is different now. There's a real plan. There's a real coach. There's a real reason to believe that the Giants can climb back to relevance. For the first time since Eli Manning was running the two-minute drill, Giants fans can look to the future with genuine optimism. That's what a John Harbaugh hire means.

The Bottom Line: This Is Exactly What the Giants Needed

I've been critical of the Giants organization for years. The dysfunction, the poor draft decisions, the revolving door of coaches, the inability to develop quarterbacks. It's been a mess. But credit where credit is due: this hire is a home run. John Harbaugh is the best available coach on the market, and the Giants went out and got him. They paid top dollar. They gave him organizational power. They committed to a real plan. That's what winning franchises do.

Tuesday's press conference in East Rutherford will officially introduce John Harbaugh as the new face of the New York Giants. After 18 years of purple and black in Baltimore, he'll be wearing blue and red. He'll be tasked with turning around a franchise that has forgotten how to win. He'll be expected to restore the pride of one of the NFL's most historic organizations. It won't be easy. Nothing worth doing ever is. But if anyone can pull it off, it's the guy who won 180 games, made 12 playoffs, and lifted the Lombardi Trophy. Welcome to New York, Coach Harbaugh. The Giants have been waiting for you.

Related Coverage: Today's NFL Analysis | Latest Picks | Handicapping Hub


Tampa Bay Lightning Tie Franchise Record with 11-Game Win Streak: How a Team Missing Its Best Defenseman Became the Hottest Team in Hockey

Posted: January 16, 2026, 11:45 AM ET

Tampa Bay Lightning celebrate win streak Nikita Kucherov Andrei Vasilevskiy January 2026

HISTORIC: Lightning match franchise-best 11-game win streak from 2020 | NHL's longest active streak

KEY STATS: Record: 29-13-3 | 1st in Eastern Conference | Road: 17-4-3 (NHL-best) | Missing Hedman, McDonagh, Point

Something extraordinary is happening in Tampa Bay, and I'm not sure the hockey world is paying enough attention. The Lightning have won 11 consecutive games. Eleven. That ties the longest winning streak in franchise history, set from January 29 to February 17, 2020. They're doing this without Victor Hedman, the Norris Trophy-caliber defenseman who underwent elbow surgery on December 15 and won't return until February at the earliest. They're doing this without Ryan McDonagh. They're doing this without Brayden Point, who's now week-to-week with a leg injury. And somehow, impossibly, they just keep winning.

Let me put this in perspective. On December 20, the Lightning were 18-13-3. A perfectly respectable record, sure, but nothing that suggested what was coming. They'd started the season 1-6, looking like a team that had finally hit the wall after years of deep playoff runs. Jon Cooper's squad appeared mortal. The Eastern Conference seemed up for grabs. Then something clicked. Eleven straight wins later, Tampa Bay sits at 29-13-3, first place in the Eastern Conference, with the best road record in the entire NHL at 17-4-3. This isn't a hot streak. This is a complete transformation.

Nikita Kucherov Is Playing Like a Man Possessed

If you want to understand why Tampa Bay can't be stopped right now, start with number 86. Nikita Kucherov has 67 points through 41 games this season, putting him on pace for another 130-plus point campaign. But the numbers from this win streak are absolutely obscene. Kucherov has 25 points during a 10-game point streak. He's recorded nine consecutive multi-point games, tying Steven Stamkos for the longest such streak in franchise history. Nine straight games with multiple points. That's not human. That's a video game on easy mode.

In the streak-clinching 2-1 shootout win over Pittsburgh on Tuesday, Kucherov was the one who buried the decisive shootout goal. The game before that, he had a goal and an assist in a 5-1 demolition of Philadelphia. The game before that, he had two goals and two assists in a 7-2 evisceration of those same Flyers. Kucherov now has 36 career four-point games, trailing only Connor McDavid (45) and Sidney Crosby (43) among active players. At 31 years old, he's playing the best hockey of his life precisely when his team needs him most.

Andrei Vasilevskiy Has Remembered Who He Is

Here's a stat that tells you everything about the early season struggles and the current dominance: Vasilevskiy started the year 0-3-2 with 17 goals allowed. He looked shaky. He looked human. He looked like a goalie whose best days might be behind him. Since then? He's been the best goalie in hockey. Vasilevskiy has won eight straight games personally, matching John Gibson and Scott Wedgewood for the second-longest goalie win streak of the season behind Brandon Bussi's nine. His 19 wins on the year are tied for second in the NHL.

In that Game 11 shootout thriller against Pittsburgh, Vasilevskiy made 26 saves and then stood tall when it mattered most. The man has two Stanley Cup championships and a Conn Smythe Trophy on his resume. When the pressure ratchets up, he doesn't flinch. Coach Jon Cooper knows exactly what he has in that net. "It's a long way from winning one in our first seven to start the year," Cooper said after the streak hit 11. That's the understatement of the century. This is a complete about-face, and Vasilevskiy is at the center of it.

Jon Cooper Reaches Historic Milestone

Lost in the streak itself is a remarkable coaching achievement. During the 5-1 win over Philadelphia on Monday, Jon Cooper recorded his 600th career NHL win. He's now the second-fastest coach in league history to reach that mark, needing just 1,005 games. Only Scotty Bowman got there quicker. Cooper has won two Stanley Cups with this franchise, reached three straight Finals from 2020 to 2022, and has been the backbone of one of the most successful runs in modern NHL history. At 58 years old, he's showing he can still adapt, still push the right buttons, still get the absolute maximum out of his roster.

"There's just tons of buy-in," Cooper explained when asked about the streak. "Great group, leaders phenomenal. Check a lot of boxes." That's Cooper-speak for a team that's completely locked in. When your captain is out with elbow surgery and your best players are dropping like flies, you need everyone to step up. The Lightning have gotten contributions from everywhere. Jonas Johansson has won three straight games in relief of Vasilevskiy, going 5-1-1 in his last seven appearances. Depth forwards like Gage Goncalves are providing key goals. The whole roster is buying in.

The Injury Report That Makes This Even More Impressive

I keep coming back to the injury situation because it's genuinely insane. Victor Hedman had elbow surgery on December 15 and is targeting a return in time for the Olympics in February. He's arguably their best all-around defenseman, a former Norris Trophy winner, the kind of player you can't replace. Ryan McDonagh has been out for nine games and counting. Brayden Point, who had three assists in Monday's win, left that game with a leg injury and is now week-to-week. Emil Lilleberg is also out. This team is held together with duct tape and determination.

And yet here they are, first in the Eastern Conference, with the longest active winning streak in the NHL. Eight of those 11 wins came in regulation. They're not squeaking by in overtime and shootouts every night. They're dominating. The defensive structure has held despite losing Hedman. The penalty kill is functioning. The power play, with Kucherov running the show, is lethal. Every box is getting checked by a team that, by all rights, should be struggling to stay afloat until their stars return.

What's Next: A Shot at History in St. Louis

Friday night in St. Louis, the Lightning have a chance to make history. Win number 12 would give them the longest winning streak in franchise history, breaking the tie with the 2020 squad. The Blues are banged up themselves and haven't been playing well. This is a get-able game for Tampa Bay. But that's what people said about Pittsburgh, who pushed them to a shootout. Every team in the NHL is dangerous, especially against a squad riding a historic streak that everyone wants to end.

What happens after that? The Lightning have a favorable schedule coming up and reinforcements on the horizon. Hedman should be back sometime in February. Point's injury is being described as week-to-week, not season-ending. If Tampa Bay can maintain this level through January while their stars heal up, they could enter the playoffs as the most dangerous team in the Eastern Conference. They've already proven they can win without their full roster. Imagine what happens when everyone is healthy.

The Bottom Line: Don't Sleep on Tampa Bay

I've watched a lot of hockey over the years. I've seen hot streaks come and go. But what the Lightning are doing right now feels different. This isn't a team getting lucky bounces or riding an unsustainable shooting percentage. This is a championship-caliber organization that went through adversity, looked in the mirror, and decided to stop losing. Kucherov is playing like the Hart Trophy winner he was in 2019. Vasilevskiy is playing like the Conn Smythe winner he was in 2021. Cooper is coaching like a man trying to prove he's not finished winning titles.

Eleven straight wins. First place in the East. The best road record in hockey. All without Victor Hedman, all without a fully healthy roster. The Tampa Bay Lightning were written off after that 1-6 start. They were supposed to be too old, too banged up, too far past their prime. They've responded by tying a franchise record and putting the entire league on notice. Anyone who counts this team out in the playoffs is making a grave mistake. The Bolts are back, and they're just getting started.

Related Coverage: Today's NHL Analysis | Handicapping Hub | Featured Game


Kyle Tucker Signs Historic 4-Year, $240 Million Deal with Dodgers: LA's Superteam Just Got Even More Terrifying

Posted: January 15, 2026, 8:47 PM ET

Kyle Tucker Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder signing 2026 MLB free agency
Chicago Cubs → $240M / 4 YRS → Los Angeles Dodgers

BLOCKBUSTER: Kyle Tucker agrees to 4-year, $240 million contract with Los Angeles Dodgers | $60M AAV sets record for largest annual salary by net present value in MLB history

KEY DETAILS: Only $30M deferred | Opt-outs after 2027 and 2028 | Dodgers payroll soars to $412.9M | Tucker joins Ohtani, Betts, Freeman in loaded lineup

I genuinely don't know how the Dodgers keep getting away with this. The back-to-back World Series champions, fresh off beating the Blue Jays in seven games to claim their second consecutive title, just added Kyle Tucker to what was already the most terrifying lineup in baseball. Four years, $240 million. An average annual value of $60 million that sets the record for the largest annual salary by net present value in MLB history. And here's the kicker: only $30 million of that money is deferred. For the Dodgers, who have practically invented creative deferral structures to circumvent competitive balance, that's basically paying cash on the barrelhead. This isn't just a signing. This is a statement.

Let me paint you the picture of what this means. Kyle Tucker, the 28-year-old four-time All-Star who just hit .266/.377/.464 with 22 home runs, 73 RBIs, and 25 stolen bases in 136 games last season, is now going to bat in a lineup that already includes Shohei Ohtani, Mookie Betts, Freddie Freeman, Will Smith, Max Muncy, Teoscar Hernandez, and Tommy Edman. That's not a baseball team. That's a video game roster someone created with all the sliders maxed out. I've been covering baseball for a long time, and I'm struggling to remember a lineup this loaded with proven star-caliber talent. The 1927 Yankees? The Big Red Machine? This Dodgers team might be right there with them.

The Contract Breakdown: Why $60M AAV Changes Everything

The numbers on this deal are staggering, and I want to make sure we fully understand what just happened here. Kyle Tucker is getting $240 million over four years. That works out to $60 million per season in average annual value. For context, that's more than Shohei Ohtani's AAV on his 10-year, $700 million deal. It's more than Mike Trout, more than Mookie Betts, more than any position player in baseball history has ever averaged per year. And because only $30 million of the total contract is deferred, the luxury tax hit comes out to $57.1 million annually. That's not funny money spread out over decades. That's real dollars hitting the Dodgers' payroll right now.

The structure of this deal tells you everything about the Dodgers' approach. Tucker gets opt-outs after both the 2027 and 2028 seasons. That means if he stays healthy and keeps producing at an elite level, he can hit free agency again at age 30 or 31 and potentially secure another massive contract. The Dodgers are betting that Tucker will be so happy in LA, surrounded by that lineup and competing for championships every year, that he won't want to leave. But they're also protecting themselves: if Tucker declines or gets hurt, the contract is short enough that they're not stuck with dead money for a decade. It's smart business on both sides, but the player always has the upper hand when he's getting $60 million a year.

The Tucker Story: From Houston to Chicago to Hollywood

Kyle Tucker's journey to this moment is one of the more interesting paths in recent baseball history. The Astros drafted him fifth overall in 2015, and he developed into one of the best all-around outfielders in the game during Houston's dynasty years. He was there for the 2022 World Series title. He made four consecutive All-Star teams from 2022 to 2025. He became the kind of player you build around. But the Astros, with their farm system depleted and their payroll constraints tightening, made the difficult decision to trade him to the Cubs prior to last season rather than pay him what he was going to demand in free agency.

Tucker spent one season in Chicago, putting up solid numbers despite playing on a rebuilding team that went nowhere near the playoffs. The Cubs got to see him up close and presumably wanted to keep him, but they weren't willing to go to the heights that free agency demanded. The Blue Jays reportedly offered the most years and total dollars, looking to make a splash in a market that hasn't seen playoff baseball since 2022. The Mets came in with four years and $200 million, a significant offer from Steve Cohen's deep pockets. But in the end, Tucker chose the Dodgers, accepting slightly less total guaranteed money for the opportunity to play for a proven winner. Sometimes the championship pedigree is worth more than extra zeros on the check.

The 2025 Season: Tucker's Numbers in Context

Let's talk about what the Dodgers are actually getting here. In 2025, Tucker slashed .266/.377/.464 across 136 games with the Cubs. That's a .841 OPS, which in the modern pitcher-friendly environment is elite. He hit 22 home runs, drove in 73 runs, and swiped 25 bags. That combination of power and speed is increasingly rare in today's game. Tucker isn't just a slugger who chugs around the bases. He's a legitimate five-tool player who can hurt you in multiple ways every single night.

What makes Tucker special is his consistency. He doesn't have extreme hot and cold streaks. He doesn't disappear for weeks at a time. He shows up every day, takes professional at-bats, and produces. His walk rate has consistently hovered around 12%, showing excellent plate discipline. He rarely chases outside the zone. He makes contact when he needs to and drives the ball when he gets his pitch. Defensively, he's above average in left field with a strong arm and good instincts. This is a complete player. The Dodgers aren't just buying name recognition or star power. They're buying tangible production from a guy entering his prime years.

The Luxury Tax Implications: $400 Million and Beyond

Here's where things get truly absurd. With the Tucker signing, the Dodgers' estimated luxury tax payroll has climbed to approximately $398.6 million. Their actual 2026 payroll sits at a staggering $412.9 million. To put that in perspective, that's more than four times the payroll of the Oakland Athletics. It's roughly double what most mid-market teams spend on their entire rosters. The Dodgers are operating on a completely different financial plane than the rest of baseball, and they don't seem to care one bit about the competitive balance ramifications.

The luxury tax was supposed to be baseball's version of a soft salary cap. Teams that exceed certain thresholds pay escalating penalties, with the money theoretically redistributed to smaller market clubs. But for the Dodgers, those penalties are just a cost of doing business. Owner Mark Walter and the Guggenheim ownership group have proven time and again that they're willing to pay whatever it takes to win. And why wouldn't they? They've now won back-to-back World Series. The return on investment for championship teams in terms of revenue, merchandise, and franchise valuation far exceeds whatever luxury tax penalties they incur. The system is broken, and the Dodgers are the team most brazenly exposing it.

What the Competition Was Offering: Blue Jays, Mets, and Others

The Tucker sweepstakes came down to three serious contenders: the Dodgers, the Mets, and the Blue Jays. Toronto reportedly offered the most total money on a longer-term deal, willing to pay Tucker into his mid-30s for the privilege of adding a franchise cornerstone. The Blue Jays desperately need star power after watching Vladimir Guerrero Jr. sign with the Yankees and Bo Bichette get traded to Cleveland. Tucker would have been the face of a rebuild in Toronto. Instead, he chose to be one of many stars in LA's loaded constellation.

The Mets came in strong with a reported four-year, $200 million offer. Steve Cohen has shown he's willing to spend aggressively, but even he couldn't match the Dodgers' commitment. What's interesting is that Tucker didn't just take the most money. He left an estimated $40 million or more on the table by choosing LA over Toronto's longer deal. That tells you something about priorities. At 28 years old with two opt-outs in his pocket, Tucker is betting on himself. He's betting that winning championships in LA will enhance his brand and his legacy more than maximizing every last dollar in Toronto. Given the Dodgers' track record, it's hard to argue with his logic.

The 2026 Dodgers Lineup: An Embarrassment of Riches

Let's project what the Dodgers' lineup might look like on Opening Day 2026. You're looking at something like Mookie Betts leading off, followed by Shohei Ohtani. Then Kyle Tucker in the three-hole, Freddie Freeman cleanup, Will Smith in the five spot. Max Muncy, Teoscar Hernandez, Tommy Edman filling out the bottom half. That's eight hitters who could reasonably be in the middle of any other team's lineup. There's no easy out. There's no spot where a pitcher can relax. Every single at-bat is a battle against a professional hitter with legitimate power.

What makes this lineup truly unfair is the versatility. Ohtani and Tucker give you both power and speed from the left side. Betts and Freeman are contact-oriented hitters who rarely strike out. Muncy takes walks at an elite rate. Smith is one of the best-hitting catchers in baseball. This isn't a team that relies on one or two stars to carry the offense. It's a machine with multiple gears, capable of beating you in dozens of different ways. Small ball, power ball, running game, situational hitting. The Dodgers can do it all. And now they do it all even better with Tucker in the fold.

The Roster Casualty Question: Who Gets Squeezed?

Adding a player of Tucker's caliber inevitably creates a roster crunch. The Dodgers can't simply add him to the mix without someone losing playing time or getting traded. The most obvious candidates are Teoscar Hernandez, who's entering the final year of his contract, and Andy Pages, the promising young outfielder who was expected to take on a bigger role. Hernandez could potentially shift to a DH platoon or fourth outfielder role, but that's an expensive bench piece. Pages might be trade bait now that his path to everyday playing time has been blocked.

There's also the question of Chris Taylor, the ultra-utility man who's been with the organization for years. Taylor can play multiple positions, but at some point, you run out of spots for all these capable players. The Dodgers have mastered the art of roster optimization, shuffling players in and out of the lineup based on matchups and rest needs. But even their wizardry will be tested with this much talent competing for playing time. It's a good problem to have, certainly, but it's a problem nonetheless. Expect the Dodgers to make at least one more trade before Opening Day to clear roster space and add pitching depth.

The Three-Peat Chase: Can Anyone Stop LA?

The Dodgers have now won two consecutive World Series titles. The last team to win three straight was the Yankees dynasty from 1998 to 2000. Before that, you have to go back to the Oakland A's from 1972 to 1974. It's baseball's hardest feat. The playoffs are too random, the regular season too grueling, the competition too fierce for anyone to sustain excellence across three full campaigns. And yet, looking at this Dodgers roster, you have to wonder if they're built to do exactly that. They have the hitting. They have the depth. If their pitching holds up, they're going to be prohibitive favorites to make it three in a row.

The rest of baseball should be terrified. The Yankees made big moves this offseason to try and close the gap. The Braves still have a solid core. The Phillies and Padres remain dangerous. But none of them can match what the Dodgers have assembled. This is the Death Star of baseball rosters, and Tucker is just another laser cannon added to an already overwhelming arsenal. Baseball needs competitive balance. Baseball needs hope for the other 29 fanbases. Right now, it's hard to see where that hope comes from. The Dodgers are operating on a level that no one else can match, and they keep getting stronger.

Tucker's Legacy: What This Signing Means for His Career

For Kyle Tucker personally, this is a transformative moment. He spent his formative years in Houston, winning a ring and establishing himself as an elite player. But he was always in the shadow of Jose Altuve, Alex Bregman, and the bigger names from those Cubs teams. In Chicago, he was the clear best player, but on a team going nowhere. Now, in LA, he joins an ensemble cast of superstars where he'll have the platform to cement his place among the game's all-time greats. If he helps the Dodgers win a third straight championship, Tucker's Hall of Fame case becomes undeniable.

The financial security is obviously significant. Tucker has now guaranteed himself at least $240 million, with the potential for more if he opts out and signs another mega-deal at 30 or 31. But for a player of Tucker's caliber and competitive fire, the money was always going to come. What he's really buying with this decision is the chance to play in October every year. The chance to be part of something historic. The chance to measure himself against the best and prove he belongs. In LA, surrounded by all that talent, Tucker is going to find out exactly how good he can be. And I have a feeling we're going to like what we see.

The Bottom Line: This Is What Winning Looks Like

Love them or hate them, you have to respect what the Dodgers are doing. They identified the best player available in free agency. They paid him more per year than anyone has ever been paid. And they did it from a position of strength, as reigning back-to-back World Series champions who didn't need to make any move at all. That's organizational excellence at its finest. Andrew Friedman and the Dodgers' front office have built something truly special in Los Angeles, and the Tucker signing is just the latest chapter in a remarkable run of success.

For everyone else in baseball, this has to be demoralizing. You spend all offseason trying to improve your roster, making moves that your fanbase gets excited about, and then the Dodgers casually add a four-time All-Star to a lineup that was already the best in the sport. It's not fair. It's not balanced. It's not what baseball is supposed to be. But it is reality. And until the other owners start spending like the Dodgers, or until the league implements a real salary cap, this is going to keep happening. Kyle Tucker in a Dodger blue jersey. Four years, $240 million. The rich get richer, and everyone else scrambles for scraps. Welcome to modern baseball.

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Jonathan Kuminga Demands Trade: The Warriors' Disgraceful Mishandling of Their Own Draft Pick Has Reached Its Breaking Point

Posted: January 15, 2026, 5:06 PM ET

Jonathan Kuminga Golden State Warriors forward frustrated benched Steve Kerr 2026

BREAKING: Kuminga formally requests trade on FIRST DAY of eligibility | 13 consecutive DNP-CDs | Relationship with Steve Kerr beyond repair

INTERESTED TEAMS: Sacramento Kings | Los Angeles Lakers | Dallas Mavericks | Chicago Bulls | Portland Trail Blazers

I've watched a lot of NBA dysfunction over the years. The Kings for two decades. The Knicks in their worst iterations. The post-Harden Rockets. But I'm not sure I've ever seen a franchise sabotage one of their own draft picks quite like the Golden State Warriors have done to Jonathan Kuminga. Today—January 15, 2026—marks the first day Kuminga was eligible to be traded after signing his extension in September. And wouldn't you know it, within hours of the calendar flipping, the 23-year-old formally requested a trade. Can you blame him? I certainly can't. Because what Steve Kerr and the Warriors front office have done to this man over the past five years—and especially the last two months—is nothing short of disgraceful.

Let me paint you a picture of the absurdity here. Jonathan Kuminga was the seventh overall pick in the 2021 NBA Draft. A consensus five-star recruit. The top small forward in his class. He was supposed to be part of Golden State's future—the next wave after Steph, Klay, and Draymond ride off into the sunset. Four and a half years later, this man is sitting on the bench watching garbage time unfold while Steve Kerr pretends he doesn't exist. Kuminga has logged THIRTEEN consecutive DNP-CDs. That's "Did Not Play - Coach's Decision" for those keeping score at home. Not injured. Not sick. Just... ignored. By a team paying him $22.5 million this season. Let that sink in. Twenty-two and a half million dollars to watch basketball from the best seats in the house.

The Numbers Don't Lie: Kuminga Was Playing WELL Before Kerr Buried Him

Here's what makes this whole situation even more infuriating. Kuminga started the first 12 games of the 2025-26 season. Not as a project. Not as a "let's see what he can do" experiment. As a STARTER on a team with championship aspirations. And you know what? He was good. Really good. In those 12 starts, Kuminga averaged 14.9 points, 6.8 rebounds, and 3.1 assists in 29.1 minutes per game. He was aggressive. He was attacking the rim. He was doing exactly what everyone always said he could do if given consistent opportunity. Steve Kerr himself called him a "secure starter" after the hot start. Those were his exact words. Secure. Starter.

And then? Kerr yanked him from the rotation entirely. Not benched for a game or two to send a message. Not moved to a reserve role to manage minutes. Completely removed from the rotation. Gone. Vanished. The last time Jonathan Kuminga played a single minute of NBA basketball was December 18th against the Phoenix Suns, where he logged a grand total of nine minutes and scored two points. Since then? Nothing. Thirteen straight games of watching his teammates lose (the Warriors are 24-18, mediocre by any standard) while he collects splinters on the bench. Try to make it make sense. I've been trying for weeks. I can't.

Steve Kerr's "Explanation" Is an Insult to Anyone With Eyes

So what's Kerr's justification for this? When asked about Kuminga's absence from the rotation on 95.7 The Game's "Willard and Dibs," here's what the nine-time champion head coach offered: "I'm just going to say it's a difficult situation. You guys know it, everybody knows it. I'm just going to leave it at that. It's a difficult situation." Wow. Groundbreaking insight there, Steve. Really illuminating stuff. A 23-year-old is having his career actively derailed, and the best you can muster is "it's difficult"? That's not an explanation. That's a cop-out. That's a man who knows he has no good answer and is hoping the question goes away.

Kerr did eventually elaborate slightly, blaming "spacing issues" with the Kuminga-Jimmy Butler-Draymond Green lineup at the 2-3-4 positions. "Sometimes Steph can offset every spacing obstacle in your way—he's that good—but in the modern NBA, I think it's tough to do that," Kerr explained. "We gave that lineup several weeks, and eventually the weaknesses of the lineup were exposed." Okay, fine. Maybe that specific lineup had issues. But here's the thing, Steve: THE ANSWER TO LINEUP ISSUES ISN'T TO NEVER PLAY THE GUY AGAIN. You adjust. You find different combinations. You stagger minutes. You don't bury a former lottery pick in the deepest corner of the bench like he doesn't exist.

Not Even Garbage Time: The Ultimate Disrespect

What really gets me—what truly exposes this situation as personal rather than basketball-related—is that Kerr won't even play Kuminga in garbage time. We're talking about games where the Warriors are up or down by 25 points with three minutes left. Situations where you empty the bench and let the deep reserves get some run. Even then, Kuminga sits. Even when it literally doesn't matter, when there's zero competitive reason to keep him out, Kerr leaves him glued to the bench. That's not a coaching decision. That's a message. And the message is crystal clear: I don't want you here.

When asked specifically about why Kuminga doesn't even get garbage-time minutes, Kerr had nothing. Absolutely nothing. Just that same "difficult situation" non-answer. Meanwhile, anonymous Warriors teammates are speaking out, with one source telling reporters the whole thing is "a complete waste of everybody's time." Jimmy Butler, who joined the Warriors this season and has seen plenty of organizational dysfunction in his career, has reportedly been supportive of Kuminga behind the scenes. Because even Butler—a guy who forced his way out of two franchises—can see that what's happening here is fundamentally wrong.

NBA Legends Are Speaking Out: "I Would've Choked Him by Now"

The Kuminga situation has gotten so egregious that NBA Hall of Famers are openly criticizing Steve Kerr. Isiah Thomas—a two-time champion, Finals MVP, and former president of the NBA Players Association—appeared on FanDuel's "Run It Back" and dropped this bomb: if he were in Kuminga's shoes, he would have "choked" Steve Kerr by now, referencing the infamous 1997 incident when Latrell Sprewell attacked Warriors coach P.J. Carlesimo at practice. Now, obviously Thomas was being somewhat hyperbolic. But the fact that a Hall of Famer is invoking the most notorious player-coach incident in NBA history to describe what's happening says everything about how bad this has gotten.

Thomas credited Kuminga for maintaining his professionalism and "not blowing up" despite the treatment. "That young man has handled this with more class than most would," Thomas said. And he's right. Kuminga has been nothing but professional throughout this ordeal. No locker room outbursts. No subtweets. No media campaigns. Just a guy showing up to work every day knowing he's not going to play, knowing his career is being actively stunted, and somehow keeping it together. That takes serious mental fortitude. Most players would've demanded out months ago. Most players would've made this ugly. Kuminga waited until the very first day he was legally allowed to request a trade. That's restraint I'm not sure I could muster.

DeMarcus Cousins, who won a championship with the Warriors in 2018, had even harsher words for his former coach. On FanDuel TV, Cousins called the situation "self-sabotage" and blasted Kerr for "speaking down on your team" and "not instilling confidence in this group." He pointed to a pattern of development issues under Kerr's watch, suggesting this isn't an isolated incident but rather a systemic problem with how the Warriors handle young players. "It's been problem after problem as far as development over the years," Cousins said. Coming from someone who's been in that building, who knows the culture firsthand, those words carry weight.

The Contract Situation: How the Warriors Trapped Their Own Player

Here's where the dysfunction reaches truly Shakespearean levels of tragedy. This past summer, Kuminga was a restricted free agent. He had leverage. Other teams—most notably the Sacramento Kings—came calling with serious offers. The Kings put a three-year, $63 million contract on the table, which would have given Kuminga both financial security and an opportunity to be a featured player. The Warriors, rather than let him walk or match immediately, dragged out the process for months. They low-balled him repeatedly. They played hardball. And in the end, Kuminga—who wanted to stay in Golden State, who wanted to be part of the dynasty—signed a two-year, $46.8 million deal with a team option for the second year.

But here's the kicker: as part of that deal, Kuminga waived his one-year Bird rights. That means the Warriors can trade him without his approval. He gave up his leverage to stay with the team that drafted him, the team he won a championship with as a rookie in 2022, and they repaid him by immediately benching him and tanking his trade value. League sources say Kuminga felt "pressured" into accepting the structure, and that the contentious negotiation process further strained his relationship with management. Can you imagine? You fight for a contract all summer, finally get something done, start the season as a secure starter, and then two months later you're a complete non-entity. The betrayal has to sting.

A History of Mismanagement: This Didn't Start in 2026

What's happening now is just the culmination of years of inconsistency in how the Warriors have handled Kuminga. Go back to the 2024-25 playoffs. Kuminga was barely playing during the first round against Houston, logging limited minutes while the Warriors struggled. Then Steph Curry got hurt, and suddenly—like magic—Kuminga was needed. He stepped into a bigger role and performed admirably. But as soon as Curry was healthy, right back to the bench Kuminga went. The message was always clear: you're a break-glass-in-case-of-emergency option, not a real part of our plans. For a guy with his talent and upside, that's a slap in the face.

And it's not like Kuminga hasn't shown he can be a legitimate NBA player when given the chance. On December 27, 2024, he put up a career-high 34 points with 10 rebounds and 5 assists in a loss to the Clippers. The very next night? He tied that career high with another 34-point effort in a win over the Phoenix Suns. When he's featured, when he's given the green light to be aggressive, Kuminga is a legit scoring threat at the NBA level. On January 24, 2024, he shot a perfect 11-for-11 from the field for 25 points, tying Chris Mullin's franchise record for most made shots without a miss. This is not some fringe roster player we're talking about. This is a guy with real, demonstrable NBA ability.

The Trade Market: Where Does Kuminga Land?

With the trade request now official, the question becomes: where does Jonathan Kuminga end up? Several teams have already expressed interest. The Sacramento Kings, who tried to sign him in free agency, remain the most aggressive suitors. They reportedly put Malik Monk and a protected 2030 first-round pick on the table, but the Warriors have balked at taking on Monk's long-term salary. Golden State wants expiring contracts back—they're trying to maintain cap flexibility for the post-Curry era. But here's the problem: if you're only willing to accept expiring contracts for a 23-year-old former lottery pick, you're going to get a mediocre return. And whose fault is that? The Warriors tanked his value by not playing him.

The Los Angeles Lakers have reportedly shown interest, per The Athletic's Marcus Thompson II, Sam Amick, and Nick Friedell. A Kuminga-to-LA deal would be fascinating - he'd get to play alongside LeBron James and the former superstar in a system that might actually utilize his athleticism. The Dallas Mavericks are sniffing around, as are the Chicago Bulls and Portland Trail Blazers. A proposed Portland package would send Robert Williams, Matisse Thybulle, and two second-round picks to Golden State. That's... not exactly a haul for a former top-10 pick in his prime. But again, what did the Warriors expect? You can't bury a guy for two months, obliterate his trade value, and then demand premium assets in return.

The Franz Wagner Comparison: What Could Have Been

Here's the part that really stings for Warriors fans. Jonathan Kuminga was taken seventh overall in 2021. Franz Wagner went eighth to Orlando. Same draft class. One pick apart. Wagner has blossomed into a legitimate All-Star caliber player, averaging over 24 points per game this season as the Magic's best player. He just signed a max extension. He's the face of a franchise. Meanwhile, Kuminga—who many scouts had rated as the better prospect coming out—is rotting on the bench of a team that doesn't want him. Could Kuminga have developed into a Wagner-level player if given consistent opportunity? We'll never know. Because Steve Kerr and the Warriors never bothered to find out.

The comparisons between the two have become a running joke in NBA circles. Every time Wagner does something spectacular, people point to Kuminga collecting DNPs in San Francisco. It's not fair to Kuminga—different situations, different organizations, different coaching philosophies. But it's also impossible to ignore. The Warriors had a chance to develop a potential star. They had four and a half years. And instead of building toward the future, they chose to chase the past, surrounding Steph Curry with veterans and treating their young lottery pick as an afterthought. Now that bill is coming due, and the Warriors have nothing to show for it.

What Happens Next: The Trade Deadline Looms

The NBA trade deadline is February 5th. That gives the Warriors three weeks to find a trade partner for Kuminga—or to somehow repair an irreparably broken relationship. The smart money is on a trade. Multiple league sources have indicated there's "rare alignment" across the organization that a move is necessary. Kuminga wants out. The veterans are frustrated watching a $22.5 million player sit. Kerr clearly has no interest in playing him. Even owner Joe Lacob has seemingly turned on his former lottery pick, making comments that suggest he views Kuminga as expendable. When everyone from the player to the owner agrees it's time to move on, a trade is inevitable.

The only question is what the Warriors will get back. And honestly? Whatever they get, they'll deserve. This is a mess entirely of their own making. They drafted Kuminga. They didn't develop him consistently. They jerked him around with his contract. They started him for 12 games and then erased him from the rotation. They destroyed his trade value by making him a public benchwarmer. And now they want premium assets in return? Good luck with that. The Warriors are going to get 50 cents on the dollar for a player who could've been worth so much more if they'd just... played him. If they'd just believed in him. If they'd just given him a chance.

The Bottom Line: This Is a Franchise Failure

I've tried to find a way to spin this that doesn't make the Warriors look terrible. I can't. This is organizational malpractice from top to bottom. You draft a talented young player seventh overall. You win a championship with him on the roster as a rookie. You have four years to develop him into a cornerstone of your future. And instead, you bench him for two months, tank his value, and force him to request a trade on the very first day he's eligible. That's not bad luck. That's not circumstances beyond your control. That's a failure of coaching, a failure of management, and a failure of vision. Steve Kerr may have nine championship rings, but his handling of Jonathan Kuminga should be a stain on his legacy.

Jonathan Kuminga deserves better. He deserves to play basketball. He deserves to be on a team that actually wants him, that will give him minutes, that will let him make mistakes and grow and become the player everyone saw when he was the top small forward in his draft class. Wherever he ends up—Sacramento, LA, Dallas, Portland, wherever—I hope he thrives. I hope he makes the Warriors regret this for years. Because what they've done to this young man is shameful. Thirteen consecutive DNP-CDs. Not even garbage time. A $22.5 million healthy scratch. In 20 years of watching the NBA, I'm not sure I've seen anything quite like it. And I hope I never do again.

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FBI Charges 26 in Sweeping Basketball Game-Fixing Scandal

Posted: January 15, 2026, 4:39 PM ET

College basketball point-shaving scandal FBI investigation NCAA game fixing charges 2026

BREAKING: Federal prosecutors unseal indictments against 26 individuals for rigging NCAA and Chinese Basketball Association games

KEY FIGURES: Former Chicago Bulls guard Antonio Blakeney among those named | 17 Division I programs implicated | 29+ games allegedly fixed

Federal prosecutors dropped a bombshell on college basketball Thursday afternoon. A 70-page indictment unsealed in Philadelphia names 26 people in what authorities are calling the biggest point-shaving scandal since 1951. We're talking 22 former college players and four fixers who allegedly ran a betting scheme across two continents, manipulating games in both the Chinese Basketball Association and NCAA Division I.

U.S. Attorney David Metcalf laid out the case in stark terms. "The defendants named in this indictment perpetrated a transnational criminal scheme to fix NCAA Division I men's basketball games as well as professional Chinese Basketball Association games," he said. The FBI investigation revealed the conspiracy ran from September 2022 all the way to February 2025. That's nearly three years of alleged game manipulation touching 17 different college programs and involving over 39 players. The fixers wagered millions on these rigged games, paying players anywhere from $10,000 to $30,000 per game to tank.

How It Started in China

The whole thing traces back to the Chinese Basketball Association in 2022. Antonio Blakeney, the 29-year-old former Chicago Bulls guard who was playing for the Jiangsu Dragons and later the Nanjing Monkey Kings, allegedly connected the gamblers to the players. This wasn't some unknown guy. Blakeney played 76 games in the NBA with the Bulls from 2017 to 2019. Before that, he was a college All-American at LSU. He had real credentials and real connections in the basketball world.

The indictment lays out a specific example. On March 6, 2023, two of the alleged ringleaders, Marves Fairley and Shane Hennen, placed about $198,300 in bets on the Guangdong Southern Tigers to cover an 11.5-point spread against Blakeney's team. That night, Blakeney scored just 11 points when he'd been averaging 32. Guangdong won 127-96 and easily covered. When the CBA season ended, prosecutors say nearly $200,000 in cash was delivered to a Florida storage unit belonging to Blakeney.

The Scheme Spreads to America

After their success in China, the fixers expanded to American college basketball by the 2023-24 season. Their strategy was simple but effective. They targeted players at mid-major programs who weren't getting big NIL money and offered them cash to underperform. The players didn't have to lose games outright. They just had to shave points, make sure their team didn't cover the spread. The fixers could bet against the spread and cash regardless of who actually won.

The list of implicated schools is long: Nicholls State, Tulane, Northwestern State, Saint Louis, La Salle, Fordham, Buffalo, DePaul, Robert Morris, Southern Mississippi, North Carolina A&T, Kennesaw State, Coppin State, New Orleans, Abilene Christian, Eastern Michigan, and Alabama State. Seventeen programs total. Seventeen coaching staffs who apparently had no idea what was happening on their own rosters.

Who Got Charged

The indictment names 22 players: Alberto Laureano (24), Arlando Arnold (24), Simeon Cottle (21), Kevin Cross (25), Bradley Ezewiro (23), Shawn Fulcher (22), Carlos Hart (23), Markeese Hastings (25), Cedquavious Hunter (22), Oumar Koureissi (24), Da'Sean Nelson (23), Demond Robinson (25), Camian Shell (23), Dyquavion Short (20), Airion Simmons (25), Jalen Terry (24), Corey Hines (23), Diante Smith (25), Isaiah Adams (24), Micawber Etienne (24), and Elijah Gray (22). Most of these guys are in their early twenties. They allegedly sold out their futures for quick cash.

The four fixers face the most serious allegations. Marves Fairley (40) and Shane Hennen (40) are described as high-stakes gamblers who ran the betting operation. Trainers Jalen Smith (30) and Roderick Winkler (31) allegedly served as middlemen, using their access to players to recruit them into the scheme. Blakeney himself is accused of being both a participant and a recruiter. All face charges including bribery in sporting contests, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and wire fraud.

When the Fixes Failed

Not every attempt worked out. On February 21, 2024, the fixers allegedly bribed La Salle players to make sure their team wouldn't cover against St. Bonaventure. But La Salle led 36-28 at halftime anyway. The players couldn't tank convincingly enough and the fixers lost their bets. Two days later, Elijah Gray allegedly agreed to underperform in a Fordham game. He scored just 3 points, way below his average, but his teammates stepped up and Fordham still won 79-67.

These failures show why the fixers cast such a wide net. Basketball is unpredictable. Ten players on the court, coaching decisions, pure randomness. One guy tanking can be offset by another guy going off. According to prosecutors, the fixers involved 39 players across 17 teams to make sure enough of their bets would hit. The numbers suggest they won way more often than they lost.

The Philadelphia Connection

Philadelphia keeps coming up in these gambling investigations. Reports indicate six-figure sums were wagered at Rivers Casino as part of this scheme. The city's become a gambling hub since Pennsylvania legalized sports betting, and its proximity to ACC schools made it a natural base for the operation. The FBI's Philadelphia field office led the case.

Here's something that should raise eyebrows: Shane Hennen was also charged in a separate case back in October 2025. That investigation led to arrests of 34 people including Terry Rozier, Trail Blazers head coach Chauncey Billups, and former NBA player Damon Jones. All linked to gambling schemes connected to organized crime. Hennen's name showing up in both cases tells you this isn't some isolated incident. This is organized corruption on a scale we haven't seen in decades.

Echoes of 1951

Prosecutors are drawing direct comparisons to the 1951 point-shaving scandal that nearly destroyed college basketball. That scheme involved players from CCNY, Kentucky, Bradley, and other programs who got paid to manipulate point margins. It led to major reforms and stricter oversight. Seventy years later, here we are again. All those compliance departments, all that scrutiny, and players are still getting paid to throw games.

The modern version is more sophisticated though. In 1951, the corruption stayed domestic. This conspiracy stretched from China to American college campuses, using online gambling platforms and digital money transfers that didn't exist back then. The fixers could place bets from anywhere and move cash through channels that are nearly impossible to track. Technology made sports betting more accessible, and apparently it made game-fixing easier too.

What Happens Now

All 26 defendants face serious federal charges. Bribery in sporting contests carries significant prison time. Add wire fraud and conspiracy counts and these sentences could stack up fast. Some defendants will probably flip and cooperate with prosecutors, which could expose even more names and programs. This investigation might just be getting started.

The NCAA will have to conduct its own investigation into those 17 programs. The timeline of the fixing extends into the 2024-25 season, which raises questions about whether any current players or coaches knew what was happening. Every school named in this indictment is about to face some very uncomfortable questions.

Why Mid-Majors Were Targeted

Since the Supreme Court struck down the federal sports betting ban in 2018, gambling has exploded. Legal betting is now available in 38 states. College games are among the most heavily wagered events in the country. Meanwhile, NIL has flooded money into college athletics, but that money isn't distributed evenly. Stars at Duke and Kentucky get million-dollar deals. Players at Nicholls State and Coppin State get almost nothing.

The fixers knew exactly who to target. A mid-major player struggling with bills sees $20,000 to have an off night and the math starts to look different in his head. It's not right, the legal consequences are severe, and it destroys careers permanently. But when you're 21 years old and broke, that kind of money is hard to turn down. That's the vulnerability these fixers exploited.

The Integrity Problem

Every time you watch a college basketball game now, you have to wonder. Is this real? Are these guys actually trying? The FBI says the scheme involved games as recently as last season. Fans were watching fixed contests and had no idea. That's a betrayal that cuts deep. Sports matter because the outcome is uncertain. When that uncertainty is fake, something essential gets lost.

The investigation will continue. More names could surface. More programs could get caught up in this. For now, 26 people allegedly conspired to corrupt a sport that millions of Americans love watching, and they came close to getting away with it completely. The marriage between gambling and sports has created incredible revenue for everyone involved. But as this scandal shows, it's also created risks we're only starting to understand.


Sam Darnold Suffers Oblique Injury in Practice: Seahawks QB Questionable for NFC Divisional Playoff vs 49ers

Posted: January 15, 2026, 3:51 PM ET

Sam Darnold Seattle Seahawks quarterback throwing football practice 2025
San Francisco 49ers @ SEA -7.5 | O/U 44.5 Seattle Seahawks

BREAKING: Sam Darnold (oblique) listed QUESTIONABLE for Saturday's NFC Divisional Playoff | Injured Thursday in practice

GAME INFO: San Francisco 49ers @ Seattle Seahawks | Saturday, January 17, 2026 | 8:00 PM ET | Lumen Field

Just when it looked like the Seattle Seahawks had everything lined up perfectly for their first deep playoff run since 2014, the football gods decided to introduce some chaos. Sam Darnold—the man who has orchestrated a 14-3 season and secured the NFC's top seed—injured his left oblique during Thursday's practice and has been listed as questionable for Saturday's NFC Divisional Playoff game against the San Francisco 49ers. The injury occurred during a routes-on-air period when Darnold felt something in his side while throwing. He immediately left practice as a precautionary measure, sending shockwaves through the Pacific Northwest and sportsbooks across the country.

Here's the thing though—if you're a Seahawks fan, don't panic just yet. When asked about the likelihood of missing Saturday's game, Darnold responded with the kind of confidence you want from your franchise quarterback: "Very low percentage. Probably closer to zero." Those are strong words from a guy who's never dealt with an oblique injury before. But Sam Darnold has been making believers out of skeptics all season long, and if there's anyone who's going to gut through some discomfort to play in the biggest game of his career, it's the eighth-year veteran who finally found his home in Seattle.

How the Injury Happened: The Thursday Practice Scare

Let me set the scene for you. It's Thursday afternoon at the Virginia Mason Athletic Center. The Seahawks are going through their normal practice routine, preparing for what could be the franchise's most important home playoff game since the Legion of Boom era. Everything is clicking. The energy is high. And then, during a routes-on-air period—one of the most routine parts of any NFL practice—Darnold delivers a throw and feels something off in his left side. According to Darnold himself, he "felt a little something" in the oblique on his left (non-throwing) side while throwing.

Now here's what's important to understand: Darnold made the smart decision. Instead of trying to push through it and potentially making things worse, he walked off the practice field and shut it down for the day. "Just didn't want to push it," Darnold explained to reporters. "Wasn't the day to push it." That's the kind of veteran awareness you want from your starting quarterback two days before a playoff game. There's no hero in practicing through something that could sideline you for the actual game. The Seahawks' medical staff will have Darnold in treatment sessions around the clock between now and Saturday's 8 PM ET kickoff.

What makes this situation interesting is that Darnold was spotted jogging on the practice field later Thursday and appeared to have no trouble moving. He wasn't limping. He wasn't favoring anything. That's an encouraging sign for a guy dealing with an oblique issue, which can seriously affect a quarterback's ability to generate torque on throws. Oblique injuries are notoriously tricky—they can range from minor tightness that's manageable with treatment to significant strains that limit arm strength and accuracy. The Seahawks are betting that Darnold falls into the former category.

The Backup Plan: Drew Lock Steps Into the Spotlight

While Darnold was receiving treatment, backup quarterback Drew Lock got some reps with the first-team offense. And this is where things get interesting from a contingency standpoint. Lock has been Darnold's understudy all season, appearing in five games and attempting just three passes. He's been the ultimate clipboard holder, watching from the sideline as Darnold delivered one of the best seasons in Seahawks history. But Drew Lock isn't some random practice squad guy. This is a former second-round pick with 28 career NFL starts under his belt.

Lock started five games for the New York Giants during the 2024 season, going 2-3 while throwing for 1,054 yards with six touchdowns and four interceptions. He's got experience. He's got arm talent. And he knows the Seahawks' offense as well as anyone outside of Darnold himself. If—and this is a big if—Darnold can't go on Saturday, the Seahawks wouldn't be rolling out some undrafted free agent. They'd be starting a veteran quarterback who's been in big moments before. The drop-off would be significant, sure, but it wouldn't be catastrophic.

Behind Lock sits rookie Jalen Milroe, the third-string option who would only become relevant if disaster struck both quarterbacks ahead of him. The Seahawks are confident it won't come to that. Everyone in the building expects Darnold to play. But the fact that Lock got first-team reps on Thursday tells you that head coach Mike Macdonald isn't leaving anything to chance. In the NFL playoffs, you prepare for every scenario. And right now, that means making sure Drew Lock is ready if his name gets called.

What This Means for the Betting Line: A 7.5-Point Spread Under Scrutiny

The timing of this injury couldn't be more significant for bettors. The Seahawks opened as 6.5-point favorites against the 49ers, a line that quickly moved to -7.5 as money poured in on Seattle. That made sense given the circumstances: the Seahawks are 14-3, they're playing at home where they've gone 6-2 this season, and they already beat San Francisco 42-21 in Week 18 to clinch the NFC West title. But this injury changes the calculus. If there's any doubt about Darnold's ability to play at full capacity, or if Lock is forced into action, that 7.5-point spread looks a lot different.

Here's the current betting landscape as of Thursday afternoon: Seattle remains a 7.5-point favorite with a moneyline of -355. The 49ers are +280 underdogs, and the over/under has dropped from 45.5 to 44.5. That total movement is interesting—it suggests books are already pricing in some skepticism about Seattle's offensive ceiling. If Darnold is limited, or if there's any hesitation in his throws due to the oblique, the Seahawks' high-powered passing attack becomes a lot less threatening. DK Metcalf, Tyler Lockett, and Jaxon Smith-Njigba are only as dangerous as the quarterback throwing them the ball.

Keep an eye on the line movement between now and Saturday. If Darnold practices Friday and looks good, the line might stay put or even move further toward Seattle. But if he's limited in practice or there's any additional concern, you could see that 7.5 come down to 6.5 or even 6. professional analysis is going to be waiting to see how this shakes out before making any moves. For recreational bettors, this is a situation where patience is your best friend. Don't lock in a position until you have more clarity on Darnold's status.

The Broader Context: Darnold's Remarkable Seahawks Journey

To understand why this injury matters so much, you have to understand what Sam Darnold has meant to the Seattle Seahawks this season. When he signed a three-year, $100.5 million contract on March 13, 2025, there were plenty of skeptics. This was a quarterback who had been labeled a bust after his time with the Jets, who had bounced around to Carolina and San Francisco and Minnesota. Sure, he had a great 2024 campaign with the Vikings, going 14-3 as a starter, but could he really replicate that in Seattle? Could he really be the answer to the post-Russell Wilson era?

The answer has been a resounding yes. Darnold has led Seattle to their best regular season record since 2014, when Wilson and the Legion of Boom were at their peak. He beat the 49ers in Week 18 to clinch the NFC West—Seattle's first division title since 2020. In Week 9 against the Commanders, he threw four touchdown passes with zero incompletions in the first half, becoming the first player to accomplish that feat since Ryan Tannehill in 2015. He set a franchise record with 17 consecutive completions in that same game, tying Warren Moon's mark. Darnold earned his second Pro Bowl selection this season. He's been everything the Seahawks hoped for and more.

And now, on the eve of the most important game of his career, he's dealing with an oblique injury that came out of nowhere. That's football. That's the cruel randomness of the sport we all love. But if there's a silver lining here, it's that Darnold has shown all season that he's got the mental toughness to handle adversity. This is a guy who was written off multiple times, who had to rebuild his career from scratch, who finally found a home where he belongs. A little oblique tightness isn't going to stop him from playing in his second career playoff start. Not a chance.

The Matchup: A Depleted 49ers Team Looking for Another Upset

While all eyes are on Darnold's status, let's not forget what the 49ers have already accomplished this postseason. San Francisco went into Philadelphia as 7.5-point underdogs last weekend and stunned the defending Super Bowl champion Eagles 23-19. They did it without Nick Bosa, who tore his ACL in Week 3. They did it without Fred Warner, who broke his ankle in Week 6. They did it without Brandon Aiyuk, who never played a game this season. And they did it despite losing George Kittle to a torn Achilles midway through the second quarter. Kyle Shanahan has coached his depleted roster to victory after victory, and now he's got a chance to knock off the NFC's top seed.

The 49ers are 12-5 on the season and have been one of the best road teams in football, going 8-2 away from Levi's Stadium. Brock Purdy has been solid, if unspectacular, completing 67.4% of his passes with 22 touchdowns and 10 interceptions. Christian McCaffrey remains the engine of the offense, and Demarcus Robinson has emerged as a reliable target in the absence of Aiyuk and Kittle. Defensively, San Francisco has leaned on a bend-don't-break approach that held Jalen Hurts and the Eagles to just 19 points. They'll need another performance like that to have any chance against Seattle.

But here's the reality: the Seahawks are the better team. Even without Darnold at 100%, Seattle has more weapons, better home-field advantage, and a fresher roster after enjoying the bye week that comes with the first seed. The 49ers have been playing on borrowed time all season, overcoming injuries that would have sunk any other franchise. At some point, the luck has to run out. Saturday night at Lumen Field might be that point. Unless, of course, the Darnold situation is more serious than anyone is letting on. That's the wild card that makes this game so fascinating.

Historical Context: First Home Playoff Game at Lumen Field Since 2017

Here's a stat that might surprise you: Saturday's game will be the first playoff game at Lumen Field with fans in the stands since January 2017. That's nine years without postseason football in one of the loudest stadiums in the NFL. The 12th Man has been waiting a long time for this moment. The atmosphere is going to be absolutely electric. And if there was ever a time for a home-field advantage to matter, it's in a situation where your starting quarterback might be dealing with an injury that affects his throwing motion.

Lumen Field has historically been one of the toughest places to play in the NFL. The noise, the energy, the passion of the Seattle fanbase—it all adds up to an environment that opposing teams dread. The 49ers know this as well as anyone. They've had plenty of painful memories in Seattle over the years. But this San Francisco team has proven that nothing fazes them. They've won in hostile environments all season. They've overcome every challenge thrown their way. Whether that continues on Saturday depends largely on what version of Sam Darnold shows up—and whether he shows up at all.

What to Watch for Friday: The Practice Report That Will Move Markets

Friday's practice is going to be must-see TV for anyone with action on this game. If Darnold participates fully and looks sharp, the narrative shifts back to business as usual. If he's limited or doesn't practice at all, the concern meter goes way up. The Seahawks will release an official injury report Friday afternoon, and that report is going to be scrutinized like a Federal Reserve statement. Every word matters. Every designation matters. "Questionable" after a limited Friday practice means something very different than "questionable" after a full Friday practice.

Coach Mike Macdonald has been tight-lipped about the situation, which is standard operating procedure for NFL coaches dealing with injury questions this close to kickoff. You're not going to get a straight answer from anyone in that building until Saturday at the earliest. The Seahawks want to keep the 49ers guessing. They want Kyle Shanahan to have to prepare for both Darnold and Lock. That's gamesmanship 101. But for bettors and fans, the uncertainty is agonizing. All we can do is wait, watch, and hope that Darnold's "closer to zero" assessment of his chances of missing the game proves accurate.

The Bottom Line: Expect Darnold to Play, But Monitor the Situation Closely

Here's my take on all of this: Sam Darnold is going to play on Saturday. The guy didn't survive the Jets, the Panthers, the 49ers, and the Vikings just to sit out the biggest game of his career because of some oblique tightness. He's been through too much, worked too hard, and means too much to this Seahawks team to let this opportunity slip away. The "questionable" designation is likely precautionary. The Seahawks are protecting themselves just in case, but the expectation within that building is that their franchise quarterback will be under center when the 49ers line up across from them.

That said, keep your eyes peeled for any updates between now and Saturday. Oblique injuries can be unpredictable. What feels manageable on Thursday might flare up on Friday or Saturday morning. If there's any change in Darnold's status, you'll hear about it immediately—and so will the betting markets. For now, the Seahawks remain heavy favorites at home against a 49ers team that has already pulled off one upset this postseason. Whether they can make it two depends on a lot of factors. But the biggest factor of all just became Sam Darnold's left oblique. Only time will tell how much that matters.

Saturday night. 8 PM Eastern. Lumen Field. 49ers at Seahawks. A spot in the NFC Championship Game on the line. One of the most anticipated playoff games in recent Seattle history. And now, an injury cloud hanging over the franchise quarterback. This is why they play the games. This is why we watch. Let's see what Sam Darnold is made of.

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